Local officials believe things will get worse before they get better in Canada Credits: Manitoba/Government
Ninety of the 175 massive fires that have erupted across Canada, forcing 21,000 evacuations and killing at least two people, have prompted Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney to send in the military to help move residents and fight the blazes.
The fires are located in the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan, which share a border with the United States. The enormity of the blazes has forced provincial authorities to declare a state of emergency, ordering tens of thousands of people ot flee their homes.
Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe on Thursday said the situation was unlikely to improve soon. Over 4,000 people have fled their homes across this province due to “the most severe conditions we have faced for quite some time, if not ever,” Moe said.
‘Largest evacuation in living memory’
In Manitoba, Premier Wab Kinew said, “The evacuation of 17,000 residents is the largest evacuation the province will have seen in most people’s living memory.”
Canadian news outlet CBC wrote, “As wildfires burn across northern Saskatchewan, the community of La Ronge is blanketed in smoke — and grappling with fear and uncertainty.”
The area has been under an air quality alert for several days, and while no evacuation orders have been issued, smoke and shifting winds have residents anxious and on alert.
“There’s a lot of smoke,” said Tammy Cook-Searson, chief of the Lac La Ronge Indian Band. “It is starting to impact, especially children who are asthmatic, or anybody with any compromised health issues.”
Fires and evacuations ongoing
The CBC also explained that in Saskatchewan, the wildfire situation remains serious, with dozens of fires still burning and new evacuations underway. It said that the fire in the Shoe Fire area is the largest, covering more than 300,000 hectares.
Cook-Searson said the fires have trapped people in some areas due to highway closures. “The only way out is by boat or by plane,” Cook-Searson said. “We need help and more resources to be able to put those contingency plans in place.”
‘Things will get worse’
With no rain in the forecast and a hot and dry summer on the horizon, the blazes are expected to balloon. Mr Moe said he thinks “there’s an admission here that things are going to get worse before they get better.”
Canadian fires have billowed dirty smoke across North America in recent years, famously spreading ominous, orange-tinted skies and filthy air across New York in 2023.
Daniel Swain, a climate scientist and meteorologist at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), stated that smoke from Canada was already visible in the western U.S. state of Colorado.
The massive fires this early in the year will likely “have knock-on effects in the US later this fire season,” Swain added.
The fires have spread into politics, as Swain suggested that dealing with the consequences of the Canadian blazes in the US will be “compounded by recent severe cuts to emergency response, wildland firefighting, and weather prediction by the Trump administration.”
Politics and climate change. Why not?
The White House immediately responded. Spokeswoman Abigail Jackson described Swain as a “longtime Democrat donor who has spent hundreds of dollars supporting liberal politicians, including loser Kamala Harris, with radical climate policies that the American people have repeatedly rejected.”
However, Sky News fact-checked the comment and found that according to “Federal Election Commission figures, Swain’s contributions since 2018 add up to less than $1,000.”
And, of course, climate change cannot be ignored. Justin Murgai, CEO of WaterAid Canada, told Sky News: “The growing scale and severity of wildfires in Canada are a stark reminder of our changing climate.”


