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Saturday, August 25, 2018
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Canada Letter
[When Extreme Fires Become Routine](
By IAN AUSTEN
Itâs impossible to avoid this summerâs forest fire season in much of British Columbia and parts of Alberta. Smoky skies have turned the sun into a tangerine-colored ball and led to canceled sporting events and grounded flights. Wine producers in British Columbia are even worried about the smoke affecting the flavor of their grapes.
[A wildfire burned along a logging road in British Columbia last week.]
A wildfire burned along a logging road in British Columbia last week.
Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press
For people living close to the fires, of course, the situation is much more terrifying. Thousands have been ordered to evacuate, and many more have packed up their valuables and remain on alert to flee their communities.
Fires have also devastated the Western United States this summer. Residents and firefighters have been killed in Northern California, and more than one million acres have burned in that state. As in Western Canada, dry, hot weather related to climate change has played an important role in the catastrophe. But what actually causes the fires?
Hereâs what Tim Arango, my colleague, found when he put that question to investigators: âDestructive wildfires nearly always begin with a human being, either intentionally or by mistake. There are endless ways people start fires â a discarded cigarette, a child playing with matches, a campfire, fireworks, a car accident.â
[Read: [Behind Most Wildfires, a Person and a Spark: âWe Bring Fire With Usâ](
The people Tim interviewed include Edward Struzik, a fellow at the Queenâs Institute for Energy and Environmental Policy in Ontario and the author of â[Firestorm: How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future]( which detailed a fire two years ago that forced 88,000 people to [evacuate Fort McMurray, Alberta](.
Mr. Struzik spoke with me from his home in Edmonton this week about the fires burning in Canada. (The interview has been edited and condensed.)
[An orange haze along the highway between Vanderhoof and Fort St. James, British Columbia, on Wednesday.]
An orange haze along the highway between Vanderhoof and Fort St. James, British Columbia, on Wednesday.
Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press
How exceptional have the recent fire seasons been in the West?
What weâre seeing now is something that we havenât seen in the last 100 years. Fire is behaving in ways that are unpredictable and pretty frightening. There are a lot of reasons for it. We live in a part of the continent from California right up to Alaska that has really experienced most of what climate change offers: a lot of dry, hot weather, which produces very dry forests, and the hotter it gets, the more lightning you get.
Have forestry practices like tree planting after harvests contributed?
By simply replanting a merchantable piece of lumber, youâre making a complex ecosystem a lot more simplistic, and itâs just not good for it.
What you get in natural regeneration, say, in coniferous forests, you have the aspen shoots coming right back. They call the aspen âthe asbestos tree.â Theyâre not easily ignited, especially when theyâre young. They hold a lot of moisture in, so they donât burn as well.
In Fort McMurray, one of the flaws of the fire suppression strategy was they had some really old vegetation maps. They thought that they had this big stand of aspen in between Fort McMurray and the fire front that would slow the fire.
How effective are we at putting out forest fires?
Once the fire gets to a certain size, say, a thousand hectares, and itâs being driven by wind and hot weather, thereâs really nothing firefighters can do to put it out. They can steer a fire away, maybe, from buildings and communities. They can maybe slow a fire. But really, in the end Mother Nature has got to come in and put some moisture on those fires.
We need to give them the resources they need to keep people safe. But to think that theyâre going to be able to put out fires â thereâs just no way.
Then what should we be doing?
Too much attention is now focused on fighting these fires, rather than dealing with future fires. The problem right now with urban planning is that we donât incorporate the threat of wildfire. Ninety-six percent of the communities in this country are vulnerable in some way to wildfire.
We subsidize people who want to buy an electric car to deal with climate change. Maybe we should have a program in place that makes homes and communities more resilient. Like, say, if you replace a cedar roof with a steel roof, you get a rebate. The cost of suppression and recovery is becoming so high that somethingâs got to be done. We canât just keep opening the governmentâs wallet to bail people out year after year after year.
[Vancouver was covered in a haze this week.]
Vancouver was covered in a haze this week.
Don Mackinnon/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Those of you who are coping with the smoke may find this Smarter Living [guide to air purifiers]( to be of some use. The article does note, though, that air purifiers probably offer minimal benefits in clearing wildfire pollution.
On a lighter note, thanks to those of you who shared your stories of legendary creatures and mythical monsters in your corner of Canada, [based on our request last week](. We havenât forgotten about them, and will be highlighting a selection in a coming Canada Letter.
Trans Canada
[Quebecâs âTrash Radioâ Host Fires Up Outrage, and Big Ratings](
Called âradio poubelle,â or trash radio, the genre known for anti-immigrant, anti-environmentalism and anti-feminist programming has found a foothold in Quebec, particularly in Quebec City. To understand the phenomenon, Dan Bilefsky went to the provincial capital to interview Jeff Fillion, whose program is Quebec Cityâs No. 1 lunchtime show.
[Mary Pratt, Realist Painter of Household Scenes, Dies at 83](
Iâve long admired Mary Prattâs realist paintings for the way she uses ordinary objects to subtly portray beauty and menace.
Around The Times
[A Plan to Unlock Billions of Barrels of Oil From Utahâs Sands](
Low oil prices have raised doubts about further expansion of Albertaâs oil sands. Clifford Krauss, a former Toronto bureau chief for The Times who now covers the energy industry from Houston, reports on a Canadian company trying to revive the oil sands industry in Utah, where so many other attempts have failed.
HOW ARE WE DOING?
A native of Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto, lives in Ottawa and has family ties throughout Western Canada. He has reported about Canada for The New York Times for over 15 years. Follow him on Twitter at @ianrausten. Weâre eager to have your thoughts about this newsletter and events in Canada in general. Please send them to [nytcanada@nytimes.com](mailto:nytcanada@nytimes.com? subject=Canada%20Letter%20Newsletter%20Feedback).
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