David Festa strikes out Tyler Stephenson
Fire specialists told CBC that rainfall is the only long-term solution to the wildfires in the province's north. While there was some rain last week, they say it was nowhere near enough.
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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Fire clouds' springing up around the Grand Canyon
Wildfires in Utah and Arizona, near the Grand Canyon, are producing "fire clouds" that can be seen for hundreds of miles and further fuel the fires. The Dragon Bravo fire near the Grand Canyon has become the largest wildfire in the continental U.S. this year, consuming 111,000 acres and destroying the historic lodge at Grand Canyon National Park. The fire is only nine percent contained, as extreme heat and strong winds continue to fuel the blaze, according to the latest update. Both it and the Monroe Fire, burning further north near Monroe, Utah, are generating pyrocumulus clouds — sometimes called "fire clouds" — that form when air over a fire becomes superheated and rises in large, smoky columns. The massive clouds are visible for hundreds of miles and resemble the shape of an anvil. The fires can also generate pyrocumulonimbus clouds, which trigger thunderstorms, and may further fuel the wildfires. "If they get high enough, they can also create downdrafts, and that's something we really watch out for because that can quickly spread the fire and can be very dangerous for firefighters who are doing their work on the ground," Lisa Jennings, a spokesperson for the Southwest Area Incident Management Team, told CBS News. Several fire crews battling the Monroe fire were forced to pull back on Wednesday when fire clouds created dangerous conditions on the ground. "Think of the fire as kind of like a hot-air balloon, so it adds buoyancy and things rise as a result," Derek Mallia, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Utah who studies fire clouds, told CBS News. "You get this towering thunderstorm over the fire, and just like any other thunderstorm it gets really windy underneath it. Because it's the West, these thunderstorms tend to be very dry." If that's not frightening enough, a fire tornado spun up in Utah and tore through a neighborhood with wind speeds of 122 mph, according to the National Weather Service. Mallia said that fire clouds are likely to appear more frequently due to climate change driven by the human burning of fossil fuels. Climate change is producing longer fire seasons, drought conditions, and extreme weather events, as we're seeing play out in the southwest. The temperature and weather conditions in the southwest are continuing to fuel the fires and erasing the gains firefighters have made in containing the blazes. The Dragon Bravo fire crossed a threshold recently, becoming what the U.S. Forest Service calls a "megafire." Megafires earn that frightening title when they reach more than 100,000 acres in size. Driving around the totality of the fire would take about as long as driving from New York to Washington, D.C. According to fire officials, the blaze in Arizona is continuing to push north. In Utah, the Monroe fire has consumed approximately 50,000 acres and the state's governor, Spencer Cox, said "terrible conditions" are continuing to fuel the blaze. 'These terrible conditions that are making it impossible for us to get ahead of this fire exist in every corner of the state right now,' Cox said. 'It would be very easy to have more fires like this one, so we need people to be incredibly cautious.' The Monroe fire is only seven percent contained.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
'Extremely serious' landfill fire closes dump in Prince Rupert through long weekend
A landfill fire in Prince Rupert has closed the municipal dump through the long weekend, with the earliest possible reopening coming on Tuesday, the city says. In a statement posted online, the northwest B.C. city says the fire was discovered Friday morning and was followed by an immediate closure. "Under advisement of our landfill consultant, the City landfill will remain closed over the weekend with the intention to reopen on Tuesday morning, pending confirmation that it is safe to do so," the statement says. "Landfill fires are extremely serious and require particular fire response and management, requiring automatic closures when they are detected. The City has reported the incident to environmental authorities and will follow any guidance provided." No air quality advisories have been issued in relation to the fire.


CBS News
3 hours ago
- CBS News
Over 600 American firefighters battling Canadian wildfires; roughly 16 million acres burned
Wildfires continued to rage across Canada on Friday, with nearly three dozen new blazes, bringing the total number of active fires to 673. According to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, there have been more than 3,700 fires this season, trailing only 2023 as the most severe ever, and scorching roughly 16 million acres. "It's an unfortunate reality," Shannon Graf, wildfire information officer for the Government of the Northwest Territories, lamented to WCCO News. "If we could stop the smoke we'd be stopping it here real quick." Many out-of-control fires are in the Northwest Territories, a massive expanse that borders Alaska. Hundreds of other blazes are raging in the provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan, just to the northwest of Minnesota. "We've got crews from out of the territory and from out of the country," Graf explained. "We've got helicopters, we've got airplanes. We've got crews on the ground. We've got incident management teams running all of these crews. Basically, we are working our people as much and as best we can while still keeping them healthy." More than 600 American firefighters have traveled to Canada this summer to help battle those wildfires, the U.S. Forest Service reported last month. Officials at the CIFFC said crews have also flown in from Mexico, Chile and Australia, among other nations.