
Sparking better behaviour: Teaching wildfire safety around northern Alberta
With the long weekend's recreation ahead, Sturgeon County officials' state of local emergency remained in place, with total fire and OHV/ATV bans still in place as of Friday at noon.
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The Redwater Recreation Area remained closed by Alberta Parks, with a 3,230-hectare active fire being held but still active despite cooler weather and days of fighting a blaze that covered thousands of hectares.
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'With the long weekend approaching, please keep in mind that the risk of wildfires is at an all-time high. No outdoor fires are allowed, and no new burn permits or fireworks permits will be issued,' said a release from the county.
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Anyone who witnessed a ban violation was urged to call the complaint line at 780-939-8418.
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'Firefighters continue to look for and extinguish remaining hot spots in the interior of the fire. This work takes time, as the fire has burned deeply into the ground in some areas. Helicopter support is available if required.
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'Firefighters need space to do their work safely. For your safety and the safety of first responders, please respect road closures and avoid burned areas,' the release said.
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Getting FireSmart
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FireSmart is a national program meant to help Canadians increase neighbourhoods' resilience to wildfires and minimize their negative impacts.
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It was founded in three decades ago to address common concerns about wildfire in the wildland-urban interface.
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Earlier this month, as Edmonton emergency responders juggled a rare three-alarm fire, a huge grass fire set tinder ablaze in northwestern Edmonton all in the same window. It was another reminder to Fire Chief David Lazenby that FireSmart prevention starts in the hearts and minds of Albertans.
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For some urban cities, wildfires aren't a common threat, but with Edmonton's scenic River Valley and the green areas surrounding the city, there's corresponding risks — and being prepared means looking at everything from development to response, Lazenby said.
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'When we look at the wildland interface, that's a connection point between the River Valley and the community at the top of the River Valley there, we're building a whole city strategy. So it's not just the Fire and Rescue Service, it's city operations, it's urban planning,' Lazenby said.

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Canada Standard
3 days ago
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These are emissions from what are called unmanaged lands. The reason that they go uncounted has to do with the international accounting rules that apply to emissions from forests and other landscapes. These emissions fall into a category known as land use, land-use change, and forestry emissions, or LULUCF. Countries are only required to report LULUCF emissions from managed lands , meaning areas subject to direct human intervention through agriculture or parks (or fire suppression). Every country has some flexibility to decide what counts as managed land, and in Canada more than 30% of forest lands are considered unmanaged. There is currently no official way to measure the carbon stored or released on this territory. All of this means that there are additional wildfire emissions in Canada that are not being officially estimated. And there is a case for tracking emissions from other gases, other landscapes, and unmanaged forests. Doing so would be useful for understanding the impacts of fires on Canada's natural landscapes, and those emissions on the atmosphere. But even if Canada was estimating these emissions, none of them would show up on the country's balance sheet. Canada's official report on greenhouse gases dutifully records LULUCF emissions, but excludes them from the country's total emissions. Canada is not alone: the country follows standard international guidance for how these inventories accounted for. Part of the rationale for excluding LULUCF emissions is that they are often due to causes that are largely out of direct human control, such as forest fires and insect outbreaks. LULUCF emissions are also more uncertain to estimate than emissions from other sources like vehicles or industry. On top of that, these emissions are so variable that they could obscure other trends in the inventory over which countries have more direct control. This arrangement for reporting emissions may seem strange, given emissions from forest fires will amp up the severity of global warming, but it's founded on a logic rooted in clarity and responsibility. The global emissions accounting system is intended to focus countries on the emissions that can be most accurately estimated and most easily controlled by national action. (There are also critiques of how Canada accounts for the emissions it does estimate, but the estimates themselves are generally considered reasonable). What does all this mean for Canada's climate progress? It's obvious that wildfires are a significant problem for Canadians as well as for the climate. And just as rising temperatures make the fires worse, so too do the fires worsen climate change. Adaptation measures, including forest management programs to reduce the spread of wildfires and policy changes that reduce the risk to communities, are clearly necessary. But adaptation alone still leaves the larger problem of the emissions from fires that will burn anyways. If those emissions cannot easily be addressed, what is to be done? The scale of the threat leaves only one good option: for societies to reduce the emissions that they can control. It is precisely because some emissions cannot be easily avoided that we must tackle the emissions we can reduce. Climate mitigation cannot stop all wildfires, but it can slow their advance, and put limits on a problem that-if left unchecked-would not stop growing. Every gram of carbon that can be kept out of the atmosphere compensates for every gram that is emitted. Every ounce of mitigation mitigates. The message of Canada's wildfires is not that there is little meaning to our efforts. It is that those efforts are more necessary than ever. This post from the Canadian Climate Institute's 440 Megatonnes blog was published under Creative Commons licence. Source: The Energy Mix