As crews battle fire near Fort Nelson, a bigger blaze to the north is moving closer

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THE LATEST:

  • The growing Patry Creek wildfire to the north, last measured at 465 square kilometres, is now just 25 kilometres from Fort Nelson as of Wednesday morning.
  • Rain is forecast for the Fort Nelson area on Wednesday but it might fall to the south of the town, which is still being threatened by the Parker Lake wildfire.
  • Gusty winds are expected to pick up in the area in the late afternoon and evening.
  • A community meeting for Fort Nelson-area evacuees will take place in person and online at 3:30 p.m. MT.
  • The Northern Rockies Regional Municipality has asked people still in Fort Nelson to limit water use to ensure firefighters have enough supply.
  • Hotels in Fort St. John are near capacity, with evacuees encouraged to go elsewhere if possible.
  • Air quality statements and advisories due to wildfire smoke span northeast B.C. and northern Alberta.

Weather conditions are expected to play a crucial role on Wednesday as firefighters continue to battle a wildfire west of Fort Nelson in B.C.’s northeast.

Since Monday, crews battling flames west of the town have had more “favourable conditions” on their side and Wednesday brings a chance of rain, but the province’s wildfire service says the region is far from safe.

The Parker Lake wildfire was burning over an area of approximately 84 square kilometres as of 9 p.m. MT on Tuesday, with part of its perimeter 2.5 kilometres from Fort Nelson.

Its rapid growth on Friday caused more than 4,700 people to leave the community and the nearby Fort Nelson First Nation just hours after it was sparked about nine kilometres west of town.

While the blaze moved south and away from the community on Tuesday, things could change rapidly as unsettled weather is forecast for the region, the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) warned.

Westerly winds up to 15 km/h are forecast for the region Wednesday afternoon and into the evening, which could cause the fire to grow.

There is also increasing concern about the Patry Creek fire, a holdover fire from 2023 that has grown significantly after reigniting earlier this year. 

In a video update posted 10 p.m Tuesday, BCWS fire behaviour specialist Ben Boghean said the fire had experienced an “aggressive rate of spread” through Monday into Tuesday, bringing it to 25 kilometres north of Fort Nelson.

WATCH | Fires from 2023 reigniting in B.C.’s northeast: 

Holdover fires part of wildfire threat in B.C.’s northeast

2 days ago

Duration 1:55

As wildfire threatens Fort Nelson, B.C., from the west, there are also much larger fires burning to the east of the town. They’re known as holdover fires — ones that never completely went out last year. Chad Pawson has more on those fires.

The fire was measured at around 465 square kilometres as of Tuesday evening and had been upgraded to a wildfire of note, defined by the service as a fire that is “highly visible” or poses “a potential threat to public safety.” 

Boghean said as of 5 p.m. Tuesday, the fire did not pose a risk to Fort Nelson but warned “that can rapidly change if the area receives strong northerly winds and continuous dry conditions.”

“Although these conditions are favourable for the short term, the threat of extreme fire behaviour returning to the region will remain,” he said.

Crews have been dousing water on homes and buildings along the Old Alaska Highway and near McConaughey Creek Road, and are also looking at planned ignitions to reduce available fuel in the area, according to Kevin Dalgarno, structure branch director for the BCWS incident management team in the region.

He said the favourable conditions have meant wildfire fighters didn’t need to work through the night on Tuesday, but they are trying to use the period of relative calm to prepare.

“[On Wednesday] the weather is going to be very supportive of our plan and with that we’re gonna try to move ahead and get ready for the next weather event,” said Dalgarno.

Concerns over water use

Due to the risk of wildfire, the emergency operations centre for the Northern Rockies Regional Municipality (NRRM), which includes Fort Nelson, has had to set up in a remote location south of the community.

In an update posted online, it says RCMP have established checkpoints along highways into the community in order to reduce traffic in the area. 

For residents who did not evacuate their homes in Fort Nelson, the municipality has issued a warning over water use. It’s urging people to limit their use of sprinklers and hoses, saying running additional water sources takes “critical resources away from where it is needed most” on the front lines of the fire.

A hazy sky over a river.
Wildfire smoke over a river near Fort Nelson, B.C. on May 11, 2024 just before the community was evacuated. The Parker Lake wildfire remains 2.5 kilometres from Fort Nelson, officials say, while the larger Patry Creek fire is now 25 kilometres north. (Cheyenne Berreault)

“If access to water diminishes in the community, so too does the ability for firefighters to continue the work they are doing on our behalf,” the notice says.

Fluid situation

Premier David Eby told reporters on Tuesday that the situation was still very fluid, and very dependent on weather conditions in B.C.’s parched northeast. 

The BCWS and NRRM Mayor Rob Fraser had both warned last weekend that the fire could have hit the community if winds pushed it eastward — but those anticipated winds ultimately did not come to pass.

“If we can get to Wednesday or Thursday, where there’s predictions of rain, we’re going to really be able to corral this thing,” Fraser said in an update around 9 p.m. MT on Tuesday.

Environment Canada says a low pressure system will bring up to 20 millimetres of rain, and possibly thunderstorms, to the area near Fort Nelson on Wednesday — but warns that most of the precipitation may likely lie south of Fort Nelson.

Side-by-side handout images, shown in infrared, taken by the European Space Agency's Sentinel-2 satellite show the Fort Nelson and Muskwa rivers appear narrower on May 5, 2024 right, with more of their banks exposed compared with images taken on May 9, 2023, left.
Side-by-side handout images, shown in infrared, taken by the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-2 satellite show the Fort Nelson and Muskwa rivers appear narrower on May 5, 2024 right, with more of their banks exposed compared with images taken on May 9, 2023, left. (European Union Copernicus Program; Processed by the Canadian Space Agency)

Fort Nelson is located around 1,000 kilometres north of Vancouver and around 800 kilometres northwest of Edmonton.

Some evacuees in Fort St. John told to leave

The forecasts that winds could blow the fire closer to Fort Nelson came as sobering news to the thousands of evacuees who are spread across northeast B.C., with more than 1,000 of them in Fort St. John.

“The wind didn’t blow the way [it] was supposed to,” evacuee Doug Park told CBC News on Tuesday. “Yesterday, they figured by 6:30 there might not have been a Fort Nelson anymore.”

“… I’m really hoping we get the rain because it would help.”

Eby said Tuesday afternoon that no homes have yet been lost to the fire. Fraser later said that firefighters have been so focused on fighting the blaze they have not yet been able to assess any impact on structures.

“It’s just not safe for people to come back yet. The worst could still happen,” Fraser said. “We’re not out of the woods.”

WATCH | Some wildfire evacuees told to depart: 

Fort St. John close to limit for accepting evacuees

19 hours ago

Duration 2:31

Thousands of evacuees from Fort Nelson remain out of their homes, scattered across northern B.C., as the Parker Lake wildfire continues to threaten the community. The city of Fort St. John has swelled with the evacuees. CBC’s Michelle Ghoussoub reports from there.

Evacuees from Fort Nelson were initially directed to Fort St. John, about 380 kilometres southeast by road.

That city is also receiving evacuees from the nearby Doig River First Nation after they were ordered to leave their homes Monday due to a wildfire spreading near the community.

As a result, hotels in the city are nearly full — and some evacuees have been told to leave as hotels look to honour pre-made bookings.

Those who are able have been encouraged to head to nearby Dawson Creek or Chetwynd, or travel farther to Prince George, about another 440 kilometres south by road.

The NRRM is holding a public meeting for evacuees at 3:30 p.m. at the North Peace Arena in Fort St. John, and online at northernrockies.ca/councilcast.

Smoke raises health risks for some

Meanwhile. Environment Canada has posted notices for parts of B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan and the Northwest Territories warning about wildfire smoke.

Forecasters say the fine particles in smoke pose health risks and are more likely to affect seniors, pregnant women, people who smoke, infants and young children, as well as those with chronic illnesses.

“Those who are more likely to be impacted should reduce or reschedule strenuous activities outdoors or seek medical attention if experiencing symptoms,” the notices say.

A helicopter in a field.
A helicopter prepares to lift off in support of wildfire suppression efforts near Fort St. John, B.C., on May 14, 2024. (CBC News)

B.C. is experiencing a record-low snowpack and drought has plagued much of the province — especially northeast B.C. — for months. Data from the B.C. River Forecast Centre predicts a long, dry fire season.

Source

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