Massive fires rage in Pacific Northwest and Canada, sending smoke south (2024)

Large wildfires in western Canada and the western United States have burned hundreds of thousands of acres over the past week, forcing thousands of people to evacuate, sending thick plumes of smoke southeastward and compromising air quality. Many of the fires have erupted from pinpoint lightning strikes amid record-breaking heat and expanding drought.

Several massive blazes covering at least 100,000 acres are burning in Oregon and western Canada.

With the smoke from the fires infiltrating the Rockies, air quality alerts were in effect Wednesday morning in most of eastern Colorado, including Denver; northern Wyoming, including Yellowstone National Park; and eastern Oregon. Much of western Canada is also under air quality alerts. Some smoke has even spread into the Midwest.

Both Denver and Chicago have ranked among the top 10 most polluted large cities in the world since Tuesday, according to IQAir.com.

Scorching temperatures have helped fuel the rapidly spreading fires. Temperatures have topped 100 degrees as far north as southern Canada, while California and other parts of the western United States are enduring their hottest 30-day stretch on record. Boise, Idaho, has reached at least 99 degrees on a record 16 straight days.

The current fire situation

Because of the number of fires and their size, both the United States and Canada have raised their scales signaling the need for firefighting resources to Level 5 out of 5. In Canada, international crews from New Zealand and Australia have arrived to assist.

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As of Wednesday morning, 69 large wildfires were burning in the United States, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

“Many wildfires in the Northwest area continue to have active to extreme fire behavior, with evacuation orders in effect on 15 fires,” the center wrote in a recent update. “Evacuation orders are also in effect for several fires in California, the Northern Rockies and the Great Basin.”

In Canada, hundreds of fires have started in recent days.

“National mobilization is heavily committed and increased measures need to be taken to support agencies,” the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Center wrote in its latest situation report.

The center warned that the potential for more fires is “high to extreme.”

Big flare up of wildfires in Washington, British Columbia, and Alberta today. Several smoke plumes appear on visible satellite tonight. pic.twitter.com/8K5D1pYKgA

— Collin Gross (@CollinGrossWx) July 24, 2024

Large and notable fires

Some of the worst fires in western North America have been in Oregon, where a lengthy state of emergency was issued earlier in the month for the “risk of catastrophic wildfires.” The state is currently home to 31 large fires and the five largest in the Lower 48 states, ranging from 53,000 to nearly 240,000 acres as of late Tuesday.

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“Never seen 31 ‘large’ fires burning in Oregon at once and I’ve been doing this for three decades!” Mark Nelsen, a meteorologist for Portland affiliate KPTV, posted on social media.

Only about a week old, the Durkee Fire in far-eastern Oregon was started by lightning and has rapidly consumed 240,000 acres. While it has mainly affected rural areas, some locations have been evacuated around the fire’s perimeter.

The nearby Cow Valley Fire has also burned more than 133,000 acres.

“This is really shaping up to be a monster fire year across the Pacific Northwest,” U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Holly Krake told Oregon Public Radio.

To the south, California’s Lake Fire, which began north of Santa Barbara on July 5, has torched about 40,000 acres but recently came under nearly full containment, and evacuation orders have been lifted. A smaller blaze, started by fireworks Sunday, ran through a Riverside neighborhood in Southern California, burning down half a dozen homes.

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In western Canada, amid hundreds of wildfires burning, about 25,000 people were evacuated around Jasper National Park on Tuesday. While a majority of the blazes are in British Columbia and Alberta, significant fire activity is also occurring across central to northern Saskatchewan.

Smoke-filled skies

The footprint of wildfire smoke over North America is quite substantial, spreading as far south as Mexico. In most spots, the smoke is at high altitudes and not close enough to the ground to affect air quality.

However, the smoke is affecting air quality near the source of the fires and where atmospheric steering currents direct it.

Across western Canada, the unhealthiest air is over the largely wilderness zone between Fort McMurray and Yellowknife. Poor air quality has also been a frequent issue in Edmonton, Calgary, Saskatoon and Regina.

In the north-central United States, the smoke has caused the air quality index to reach Code Orange to even Code Red levels. Code Orange levels are considered unhealthy for sensitive groups, while Code Red is unhealthy for everyone.

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Parts of North Dakota had Code Red levels Tuesday, while much of the area from the High Plains toward Colorado witnessed Code Orange.

While much of the smoke in North America is from Canada, fires in the Pacific Northwest and California are also contributing. Parts of eastern Oregon reached Code Purple levels for very unhealthy air early Wednesday.

How this year compares to the past

The 3.5 million acres burned by fires in the United States so far this year is about four times the area burned last year at this time but is around the average area over the last decade. California’s acreage burned is about twice the norm to date.

Canada’s 5.7 million acres burned have already surpassed the nation’s annual average, following the record-setting season last year, when just shy of 43 million acres were lost. While this year’s activity pales in comparison to last year’s, the number of acres burned is already higher than in 11 of the last 20 years.

My goodness...

That's what the BC interior looks like after prolonged heat and numerous lightning events. 🌩️🔥 #bcfire

In BC, there are now:

- 428 active wildfires (and counting)
- 266 of these (62%) are out of control
- 119 started **in the last 24 hours** pic.twitter.com/CxpFuVpTe0

— Kyle Brittain (@BadWeatherKyle) July 24, 2024

Any relief ahead?

Weather conducive to fires is expect to persist through at least Thursday in the Western United States, where high temperatures could reach at least 100 to 105 degrees, threatening records in some cases. On Wednesday, the fire threat is “critical” from eastern Oregon to southwestern Montana, according to the National Weather Service. Dry thunderstorms, producing lightning but little rain, could ignite new fires.

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After Friday, the Weather Service says, “the overall fire threat should lessen a bit.”

In the longer term, weather outlooks suggest the fire risk will be above normal through at least September.

In western Canada, conditions are improving somewhat as the heat has eased. A period of cooler and wetter weather could set up late this week and into next week, especially in northwestern Canada.

The long-range outlook calls for a high to extreme risk of high fire activity in southwestern Canada through September, with somewhat lower risks to the north.

Jason Samenow contributed to this report.

Massive fires rage in Pacific Northwest and Canada, sending smoke south (2024)

FAQs

What caused the Canadian wildfires in 2024? ›

Many fires were ignited by lightning strikes in areas stricken by drought. Smoke from these wildfires is likely to move south into the U.S., particularly over the Northwest and Midwest, according to the Washington Post, joining smoke from fires already burning in Washington and Oregon.

How many fires are there in Canada? ›

The 2023 wildland fire season was historic. Over 230,000 persons were evacuated because of potential dangers to life and health. 6,623 wildland fires burned more than 15 million hectares (ha) of Canada's managed forests.

Where are the wildfires in Canada located? ›

Which cities or areas are affected by the wildfires? The wildfires are affecting multiple areas, including the Saranagati Hare Krishna village near Cache Creek, Alberta, and northeastern British Columbia, especially areas west of Edmonton and northwest of Calgary.

Why are there fires in Canada? ›

Climate Change Is Fueling Wildfires in Canada

Though forest fires in Canada and other northern boreal forests are a common and natural occurrence, drier, hotter conditions caused by climate change are leading to fires that are larger and more frequent than in past decades.

What is causing all the wildfires? ›

During the recent “hotter” drought, unusually warm temperatures intensified the effects of very low precipitation and snowpack, creating conditions for extreme, high severity wildfires that spread rapidly. Of the 20 largest fires in California's history, eight have occurred in the past three years (since 2017).

Is Canada at risk for fires in 2024? ›

Latest projections for the 2024 seasonal wildland fire forecast indicate the wildfire risk in Canada is expected to remain high over the coming months, for much of the country, particularly in regions that continue to experience intense drought, including northwestern Alberta, northeastern British Columbia, and ...

What is the biggest wildfire in history? ›

The biggest wildfire in recorded US history is the 1825 Miramichi Fire. It blazed through an estimated 3,000,000 million acres and claimed at least 160 lives.

How bad are the wildfires in Canada? ›

Canada didn't just break its wildfire records in 2023, it obliterated them. Nearly 58,000 square miles of the nation burned — an area about the size of Illinois — in more than 6,500 wildfires coast-to-coast from April to October, according to revised numbers from the Canadian Forest Service.

Which country has the most wildfires? ›

From 2001 to 2023, Russia had the highest rate of tree cover loss due to fires with an average of 2.53 Mha lost per year.
  • Russia. 2.53 Mha.
  • Canada. 1.56 Mha.
  • United States. 553 kha.
  • Brazil. 460 kha.
  • Australia. 281 kha.

What states are affected by smoke from Canada? ›

Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, parts of Wisconsin and Iowa were under an air quality alert Monday because of wildfire smoke coming from Canada.

Which province in Canada has the most wildfires? ›

British Columbia saw the largest number of forest fires in Canada in 2021. That year, there were more than 1,600 individual wildfires in the western province. Alberta followed as the province with the second most numerous wildfires.

How long is wildfire season in Canada? ›

The Canadian wildfire season is from May and snow melt to September or October when temperatures fall, and precipitation picks up. This means we're heading into the heart of the wildfire season, so this is an issue will have to watch into the fall.

Why are there so many fires right now? ›

The state of California experienced a hotter than normal June, combined with an excess of fine fuels from unusually wet winter and spring seasons. This has resulted in the vegetation being more susceptible to ignition and fire spread than has been observed in previous years.

What is the number one cause of house fires in Canada? ›

Cooking equipment

Cooking is the leading cause of home fires and home-fire injuries.

What is the #1 reason why wildfires start? ›

The answer frequently lies in human negligence. Careless acts such as arson, unattended campfires, improperly discarded cigarettes, and reckless use of matches or fireworks stand as the foremost reasons behind wildfire ignitions. These fires may arise both from intentional misconduct and inadvertent carelessness.

Is global warming causing wildfires? ›

Although wildfires occur naturally and play a long-term role in the health of these ecosystems, changing wildfire patterns threaten to upset the status quo. Multiple studies have found that climate change has already led to an increase in wildfire season length, wildfire frequency, and burned area.

Where is the smoke in Michigan coming from? ›

Heat and lightning have caused a recent increase in fires in Western Canada, sending smoke to Michigan. The number of acres burned in 2024 is still well below the scale of last year's historic fire season, although an ongoing drought in Western Canada could mean more fires are on the way.

Where is Colorado smoke coming from? ›

Smoke from wildfires burning in Oregon, Washington and Canada is blowing into Colorado and is expected to keep the skies hazy for a few days, federal meteorologists and public health officials said.

What is the number one cause of winter home fires in Canada? ›

The most common causes overall include leaving your hot stove or burning candles unattended, or failing to butt out a cigarette. In as little as 30 seconds, a small flame can grow into a dangerous fire.

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