
More than 950 wildfires are scorching Canada from coast to coast, the national wildland fire summary says. Roughly 241 blazes are out of control.
The fires have prompted Environment Canada to issue air quality warnings from B.C. to Quebec, as well as the Northwest Territories.
Smoke from Canadian wildfires is also hovering over major cities in the United States, including New York, Chicago and Detroit.
Here’s a look at what is happening:
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Nearly 115 wildfires are burning in British Columbia. BC Wildfire Service says a majority were sparked by lightning.
Two-thirds of the fires are out of control and most new blazes, orders and alerts are in the southern B.C. Interior.
The latest evacuation order was issued Friday for roughly 140 properties near Big Bar Lake and Meadow Lake in B.C.’s southern Cariboo region, north of Vancouver.
BC Wildfire says a nearby blaze was burning across 40 square kilometres.
Two wildfires that make up the Brunswick Complex are also still out of control in the province’s Fraser Canyon region.
Multiple air quality warnings have been issued. More than 500 firefighters have been called to tackle the blazes.
MANITOBA
Multiple out-of-control wildfires are burning in Manitoba’s north.
One of them forced about 600 people from the remote community of O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation to leave on June 26.
That wildfire was burning across 172 square kilometres.
The blazes have prompted air quality warnings from Environment Canada.
The agency says smoke is causing low air quality and reduced visibility in the province and is asking locals to check in on vulnerable people.
NORTHWEST TERRITORIES
Fires forced about 1,300 residents of Fort Simpson, a village west of Yellowknife, and 130 people from Wrigley to leave their communities in late June. They remain out, with many staying in the territory’s capital.
Officials say the fire north of Wrigley, a community north of Fort Simpson, has moved closer to the community, but cooler temperatures are expected to help. The fire near Fort Simpson remains out of control.
ONTARIO
Nearly 200 wildfires are blazing across the province, already scorching more land than all of last year’s fires.
Premier Doug Ford is in Thunder Bay, where many evacuees fleeing northern Ontario wildfires have sought shelter, filling the city’s hotels to near capacity.
Ford has said more than 150 fire crews and over 80 water bombers are fighting the blazes.
Ford warned evacuees not to return to their homes.
The province has opened reception centres, including one in Thunder Bay, to help connect evacuees to shelter, food and medical services.








