Will the wildfires 'being held' near Yellowknife ever be 'under control'? Maybe by winter, officials say - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:16 AM | Calgary | -17.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Will the wildfires 'being held' near Yellowknife ever be 'under control'? Maybe by winter, officials say

Two of the wildfires burning in the N.W.T.'s North Slave regionare now classified as "being held," meaning officials don't expect the fires to grow beyond a controlled perimeter.

Climate change is creating more 'extreme events' that are difficult to predict, researcher says

Smoke from a wildfire is seen in the distance, beyond a forest and pond.
The wildfire near Yellowknife flared up in some areas on Aug. 29, but officials say the fire is still classified as being 'held.' (N.W.T. Fire/Facebook)

Two of the wildfires burning in the N.W.T.'s North Slave regionare now classified as "being held" and experts say the change has to do with controls around the perimeters.

The firebetween Yellowknife and Behchok, as well as the fire near the Ingraham Trail, are still burninglarge areas of land more than167,000 and 50,000 hectares,respectively but the new classification means officials expect the fires won't growbeyondcontrolled boundaries, according to terms defined by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre (CIFFC).

Phane Ray, incident commander for the fires in the North Slave Complex, said in a Mondaynews conference that cooler temperatures and a little bit of rain created opportunities for firefighting crews.

"Over the past couple of days we've been able to get on the line. It's allowed us to do it safely with the support of our aircraft, our ground crews and then everything else behind it. We've made up significant ground on some of those areas along the fire."

Ray said crews are working 50 metres into the fire and that's eliminating the potential for flames to spread back towardthe community.

Derrick Forsythe, an information officer with Alberta Wildfire, says that indicates to him that the edges of the fire are cooling and there is less potential for hot spots that could escape the boundary.

Still, N.W.T. fire officials say that it's unlikely the fire near Yellowknife will ever be declared "under control" by firefighters. That's whenofficials are confident that firefighting work has prevented any more growth over the long term.

"That's not where we're ever going to be with this fire," said Mike Westwick, N.W.T. fire information officer. "It's a huge fire that's burned a lot of area."

Westwick said it's "very common" for a wildfire to not be brought "under control," at least until winter arrives.

Westwicksaid there are two fingersof the Yellowknife fire, one to the north of Highway 3 and one to the south. Between them, he said there's forest and if the fire did jump its perimeter and flare back up, reaching that forested area could provide a path to Yellowknife.

A helicopter flies a bucket of water over flames.
Helicopters drop buckets of water on a flare-up along Highway 3 near Yellowknife on Aug. 21. (NWT Fire/Facebook)

He said crews are using heavy equipment to create a fuel break between those fingers.

Once that's complete, he said the wildfire risk to Yellowknife would be significantly reduced.

Fires can go back to 'out of control'

Westwick said it's possible for a firethat's being held to go back to being "out of control."

"This is not especially uncommon," he said.

Forsythe said he could only speak to his experience in Alberta, and said officials don't make light of a decision to change a fire classification. He also said he can't recall a time when a wildfire has gone from "held" back to "out-of-control".

Kelsey Copes-Gerbitz is a postdoctoral researcher with the University of British Columbia's department of forest and conservation sciences. She also can't think of time when aB.C. wildfire was being heldbefore going back out of control.

But, she says, the warming climate is changing how fires act.

"Certainly when those classifications change they're being done with the best information wildfire officers have at the time. But I think one of the challenges we're seeing with climate change is that extreme events are happening in ways that are more difficult to predict," she said.

"A fire may be classified as being 'held' and then an unpredictable wind event happens and it could switch back into 'out of control.'"

With files from Hilary Bird