The problem is, Canada is not trying to put out just one fire. Right now, a map from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre shows a country spotted red with blazes, like it’s come down with a nasty case of chicken pox. Remarkably, these fires aren’t clustered in a single region: Their spread is the northern equivalent of New York and California burning at the same time, with additional fires stretched in between. According to the CIFFC, more than 509 fires are active in Canada, 253 of which are classified as “out of control.”
Likewise, the smoke that’s been descending over America isn’t coming from one particular fire. It is the cumulative effect of all those burns, David Roth, a forecaster with NOAA’s Weather Prediction Center, told me, though those closer to the border have more of an effect. Until the fires are fully out, Americans will remain at risk of more smoke days.
And the currently entrenched fires are big enough that no one really can say how long they will drag on. “Some of these fires in [the] northern boreal forest of Canada right now are enormous,” Bruce MacNab, the head of Wildland Fire Information Systems with Natural Resources Canada, told me. “And it would take some huge rain events to completely stop them.” He believes that they likely will last “for some weeks yet.” Broadly speaking, Canada’s fire season tends to start waning by the fall. Karine Pelletier of SOPFEU, Quebec’s forest-firefighting agency, told me that, this year, barring many heavy periods of rainfall, the agency expects firefighting operations to last until September.
Justin Trudeau blowing smoke...part 3.
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