DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Most Forest Fires in Canada Are Simply Impossible to Put Out

July 18, 2026
in News
Most Forest Fires in Canada Are Simply Impossible to Put Out

Most wildfires in Canada are impossible to fight.

As smoke from forest fires in Canada have darkened skies south of the border, lawmakers in Michigan, Ohio and other U.S. states have accused the Canadian authorities of inaction and poor forest management. But most wildfires in Canada spread in such remote, vast areas that they cannot be fought effectively — and are often left to burn.

Half of Canada’s wildfires, like the ones now burning in northern Ontario, burn in such areas — either unpopulated or dotted with small Indigenous communities, said Michael Flannigan, an expert on fire management at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia. They are most often accessible only by plane, with no roads for firefighters.

Water bombers can help from the air, Mr. Flannigan said. “They buy you time for the ground crews to put the fire out,” he said. “The boots on the ground put the fires out.”

But not only is it impossible to get firefighters on the ground in such remote areas, there is also insufficient time to react to the fires. Started mostly by lightning, they spread in the highly combustible boreal forest before firefighters can respond within the first critical 30 minutes.

“About 90 of fires are put out when they’re small,” Mr. Flannigan said. “But in those areas, the half-hour window passes, and the fire is up and running.”

“To be blunt, even if we spend a lot more money, I don’t think we could stop these fires,” he added.

In the long run, wildfires are also considered beneficial for forests by removing the most flammable material and by promoting regeneration. Extinguishing every fire has the effect of increasing risks, as Canadian officials have learned in managing national parks like Banff.

The areas burned by forest fires have nearly quadrupled since the 1970s, Mr. Flannigan said.

“It’s largely, not solely, due to human-caused climate change,” he said. “Warmer weather means longer fire seasons. In Canada, our fire seasons used to be fairly short, but they’re getting much longer. The warmer we get, the more lightning we see.”

Half of Canada’s wildfires are caused by lightning, he added, but they are responsible for 92 percent of the total forest surface burned — precisely in those impossible-to-reach areas.

The post Most Forest Fires in Canada Are Simply Impossible to Put Out appeared first on New York Times.

Goldman Sachs CEO says he’d hire someone ‘smart enough’ over the smartest person in the world because ultimately experience trumps brains
News

Goldman Sachs CEO says he’d hire someone ‘smart enough’ over the smartest person in the world because ultimately experience trumps brains

by Fortune
July 18, 2026

It’s easier to get into an Ivy League school than it is to land a job at $337 billion banking ...

Read more
News

Surrogacy Scandal Upends German Politics

July 18, 2026
News

My eye had to be sewn shut after a parasite ate my cornea — the crucial mistake I made

July 18, 2026
News

Big Tech earnings season and the capex spiral

July 18, 2026
News

What Trump’s Speech Could Mean For Future Elections

July 18, 2026
Huge omissions in Trump’s petty little speech snowball it into his most important ever

Huge omissions in Trump’s petty little speech snowball it into his most important ever

July 18, 2026
Blindsided Republican Senator asks for prayers after Trump snub: ‘Big decision to make’

Blindsided Republican Senator asks for prayers after Trump snub: ‘Big decision to make’

July 18, 2026
Japan enshrines male-only succession for its shrinking imperial family

Japan enshrines male-only succession for its shrinking imperial family

July 18, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026