Some residents of Valemount, B.C., told to leave due to wildfire

UPDATE, 6:35 p.m. PT, Aug. 10, 2024: The Regional District of Fraser-Fort George and the Village of Valemount have issued an evacuation order for the South Valemount and Cedarside area due to the Canoe Road wildfire.

Residents in the affected area are required to evacuate immediately. The exact number of affected residents were not provided in the evacuation order posted on EmergencyInfoBC.

More to come.


More than 400 wildfires are burning across B.C. as of Saturday morning, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS).

In a report Saturday, the service says a period of hot and dry weather combined with lightning activity is driving new wildfire starts and could intensify existing fires. 

The service is forecasting a significant chance of lightning for the southern Interior on Saturday afternoon.

It says more than 1,700 personnel are responding to fires across B.C., and more than 260 wildfires have been declared out in the preceding seven days, as of Saturday morning.


BCWS fire information officer Sarah Budd told CBC News Friday that August is usually the most intense month for wildfires in B.C. 

On Saturday, Environment Canada issued several heat warnings for regions in the B.C. Interior, as well as Fort Nelson in the northeast. 

Firefighters set up yellow hoses, with one of them crouched on the ground and another standing holding the hose. Smoke and flames are seen in the background.
B.C. wildfire fighters are seen preparing hose to fight the Dogtooth Forest Service Road wildfire in southeast B.C. on Aug. 2, 2024. (B.C. Wildfire Service)

The majority of the wildfires active in the province are caused by lightning, according to the service. Budd said the wildfire service expects small fires started by lightning, that cannot yet be detected, will become visible as the humidity continues to drop.

“You might see a lightning strike. Then [a fire] will smoulder slowly, and as conditions warm and dry — often, wind is what does it — that will really kick those kinds of fires up,” she said. “When we’re getting more oxygen into the fire, those fires pop up and become visible to our scanning.”

A bolt of lightning is seen. Some tree branches flank the lightning in the foreground.
Thunderstorm watches have been issued for a large swath of the B.C. Interior on Saturday. (Eric Foss/CBC)

Environment Canada issued thunderstorm watches for several regions of the province Saturday, including the Fraser Canyon, South Thompson, Similkameen and Nicola. 

Philippe-Alain Bergeron, a meteorologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, said he expects hot and dry weather to continue over the weekend, before temperatures across the province return to seasonal norms early next week.

“Those temperatures will still be warm summer temperatures, but much closer to normal,” he said. 

While some parts of the province may see light rainfall next week, Bergeron said it would be very localized.

He added the wildfires are causing smoky skies across much of the province. 

Evacuation order issued west of Quesnel

The Cariboo Regional District in central B.C. ordered residents on 30 parcels of land in the Kuyakuz Lake area, west of Quesnel, to evacuate immediately on Friday night.

Three out-of-control wildfires are burning nearby — all of which are suspected to be lightning-caused — prompting the regional district to issue the order on Friday “due to immediate danger to life.”

An accompanying evacuation alert is also in place for 28 parcels of land in the surrounding area, covering more than 880 square kilometres.

Campfires banned in most of B.C.

The hot and dry weather has led the BCWS to reinstate its ban on campfires in northwest B.C. as of noon Saturday.

Last month, it rescinded the ban after rainfall and a drop in temperatures dampened fire activity.

Campfires remain prohibited across the province, except in the Prince George Fire Centre covering north-central and northeast B.C. 

According to Natural Resources Canada, human-driven climate change means hot and dry weather will happen more often, drying out plant matter that fuels fires, and creating the conditions in which they thrive. 

Researchers also expect climate change to increase the amount of lightning in the province, which could lead to more fires starting.

Source

Posted in CBC