Canada, wildfire and air quality
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Right now, wildfires are raging across over 7 million acres of Western Canada’s boreal forest, a continuous blanket of conifers and growth that covers much of the country and is particularly susceptible to changes in the climate, like warmer temperatures and less snow or rain.
More than 200 wildfires are blazing across Canada, forcing 27,000 people to evacuate and creating hazardous air quality all over the U.S.
The fires’ consequences are not just being felt locally, but internationally. Smoke from the wildfires has drifted across the Atlantic Ocean, turning skies above the United Kingdom orange. The fires’ smoke may also be uniquely toxic due to the country’s heavily mined forests.
Wildfires scorching several Canadian provinces have driven at least 33,400 people from their homes, with smoke now reaching all the way to Europe.
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FOX6 News Milwaukee on MSNCanada wildfire smoke; Wisconsin braces for more, what you need to knowAn upper-level low pressure system will draw south another thick plume of smoke from Canada. This will create another round of more hazy skies by Tuesday, June 10.
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Worcester Telegram on MSNThe sky may not look as blue this summer in MA, experts say, as wildfire smoke continuesAccuWeather long range meteorologist Paul Pastelok said long-lasting stretches of deep blue sky may not return to the Northeast for weeks, or possibly even months.
It’s still early in the season and Canadian wildfires have already burned 7.8 million acres. The yearly average is 7.3 million acres.