2018 British Columbia wildfires | |
Cost: | Unknown |
Location: | British Columbia, Canada |
Date: | Evacuations: Ended, 2018 Provincial state of emergency: August 15, 2018 – September 7, 2018 |
Acres: | NaNtitle=Current Statistics as of November 9, 2018 |
Buildings: | ~50 [1] |
Cause: | Lightning and Human-Caused |
Landuse: | Forest and residential |
Fatalities: | Unknown |
Injuries: | Unknown |
Is Season: | yes |
Year: | 2018 |
Season Name: | British Columbia wildfires |
By the end of June 2018, there had been more than 560 wildfires in British Columbia.
The Comstock Lake fire, discovered on June 21, was caused by lightning. By July 6, it had grown to and was not fully contained. At one point over 200 personnel were fighting the fire complex.
The Tugwell Creek fire near Sooke grew to, and was 10% contained by July 4. The fire threatened millions of honeybees at Tugwell Creek Honey Farm and Meadery. It was fully contained on July 9.[2]
The Shovel Fire, started on July 27, burned at least, and was still active as of August 20. Thick smoke harmed efforts to contain the fire.[3]
A human-caused fire at Nanaimo Lakes, discovered on July 1, reached 14.5 hectares by July 4.
A total of 2,115 wildfires burned of land in 2018 as of November 9.[4]
As of August 28, initial estimates put 2018 as the largest burn-area in a British Columbia wildfire season, surpassing the historic 2017 wildfire season (1,216,053 total hectares).[5] The total land burned in 2018 represented about ~1.4% of the total area of the province.
1 | Tweedsmuir Complex fire | August 8 | Out | [6] | ||
2 | Johnny Creek Fire | August 4 | Out | [7] | ||
3 | Alkali Lake Complex fire | August 1 | Out | [8] | ||
4 | Lutz Creek Complex fire | August 4 | Out | |||
5 | Shovel Lake fire | July 27 | Out | |||
6 | Nadina Lake fire | July 31 | Out | [9] | ||
7 | Verdun Mountain fire | July 31 | Out | [10] | ||
8 | Silver Lake fire | August 5 | Out | [11] | ||
9 | Tommy Lakes | May 22 | Out | [12] | ||
10 | Island Lake fire | August 1 | Out | |||
11 | Chutanli Lake fire | August 1 | Out |
Wildfires caused severe smoke to cover much of British Columbia. It has impacted tourism and cancelled flights.[13] The smoke spread across Canada and as far as Ireland. In Prince George, British Columbia smoke orange sky at 8:40 AM, and 9:10 AM turns into midnight from wildfires. Then 3 PM in Grande Prairie, Alberta thick layered smoke plume generated by the fire which turned day into night during the afternoon of that day at the location.[14]