Damage done by 2024 wildfire season well below average so far, federal officials say
Canada's wildfire season is off to a slow start, with the number of hectares burned so far this year still below the ten-year average, senior government officials and ministers said in Ottawa Wednesday.
Last year at this time, almost three million hectares of forest had been destroyed by wildfires. Canada has lost just 500,000 hectares to fire so far this year.
Officials warn the improvement over 2023 — the worst wildfire season on record — may not last, as forecasts for July and August appear similar to what Canada saw in those months last year.
«Unfortunately, this forecasting continues what has become an alarming and all-too-predictable trend,» Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Jonathan Wilkinson said Wednesday.
«Climate forecasts indicate that the coming summer months will likely be warmer than normal in most of Canada, with parts of the country seeing less rainfall than normal.»
- Tracking wildfires in Canada: CBC Interactive
Government officials said there are now 69 active wildfires across the country, with eight burning out of control. Most of the wildfires are in Alberta and B.C., with a few in Quebec.
No provinces or territories have requested federal help to fight the wildfires and officials said they don't expect that will change in the short term.
«While the overall fire severity to date has been less than last year, and less than previously anticipated in a worst case scenario in April and May, it certainly can change quickly,» said Deryck Trehearne, director general of Public Safety Canada's Government Operations Centre.
High risk regions in 2024
The Prairies, central and eastern Canada have seen rain in recent weeks, officials said, but there's been a shortage of precipitation over the last 12 months in many