Boston Sunday Globe

More than 13,000 evacuated as wildfires burn in Canada

- By Mike Ives

More than 13,000 people have been evacuated from the western Canadian province of Alberta, where unusually warm and dry weather has been mixing with strong winds to fuel dozens of wildfires, officials said Friday.

The number of active wildfires across Alberta grew to more than 100 on Friday night, up from 78 earlier in the day. As of early Saturday, more than onethird were still classified as “out of control.”

Stephen Lacroix, managing director of the Alberta Emergency Management Agency, said at a news conference Friday morning that the wildfire situation in the province was “evolving and extremely fluid.”

In northern Alberta, 20 households, along with a police station and a water-treatment plant, were lost to wildfire in the rural community of Fox Lake, authoritie­s said Friday night.

Hundreds of miles south, the communitie­s facing new, mandatory evacuation orders Friday night included Edson, a town of about 8,000 people that is less than 150 miles west of Edmonton, Alberta’s provincial capital.

In neighborin­g British Columbia, the same unseasonab­ly warm weather has caused snowpack to melt rapidly, setting off flooding and mudslides. Several flood warnings and other advisories were in effect across the province early Saturday.

In the United States, warm, dry, and windy conditions in the Southwest and the southern Plains were expected to create weather conducive to wildfires over the weekend, the National Weather Service warned in a forecast. More than 3 million people in that part of the country were under fire-related warnings or watches early Saturday.

Wildfires are increasing in size and intensity in the Western United States, and wildfire seasons are growing longer. Recent research has suggested that heat and dryness associated with global warming are major reasons for the increase in bigger and stronger fires.

In Alberta, early spring tends to be the time of greatest risk for wildfires. That is partly because spring snow melt leaves a significan­t amount of dead grass and other potential fire fuel on the land.

The latest wildfires were some of about 379 recorded in Alberta this year. “That’s significan­tly more wildfire activity, for this time of year, than we’ve certainly seen anytime in the recent past,” Christie Tucker, a spokespers­on for the province’s wildfire agency, told reporters.

As of Friday morning, wildfires in Alberta had burned nearly 100 square miles of land in the province, an area nearly onethird of the size of New York City.

 ?? ALBERTA WILDFIRE VIA NEW YORK TIMES ?? Smoke rose from a wildfire near Lodgepole, Alberta, on Thursday.
ALBERTA WILDFIRE VIA NEW YORK TIMES Smoke rose from a wildfire near Lodgepole, Alberta, on Thursday.

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