Wildfires in Canada have been intensifying in recent years, particularly in 2023 when records were shattered. As smoke has shrouded major cities, including Toronto and Vancouver, people in Canada are learning to live with a new reality. Smoke and wildfires are increasingly a feature of Canadian summers from coast to coast — and while it varies year to year, experts say “wildfire season” is here to stay.

Canada wildfire map

This map displays the latest wildfire data from Natural Resources Canada, updated daily.

What causes wildfires in Canada?

The vastness of Canada means fire conditions, and its causes, vary considerably from one region to another. The majority of wildfires in Alberta are caused by human carelessness, while in B.C., it’s lightning. Drought in one area can bring high risk of fires, while in other parts of the country there’s plenty of rain. 

Even still, dry conditions can settle across large landscapes, as in 2023, seemingly engulfing the nation in smoke. That smoke can travel far and wide, choking cities nowhere near an inferno and bringing wildfire to the forefront of the national consciousness. 

How do climate change and logging fuel wildfires?

As climate change progresses, the risks of wildfire in Canada are increasing — droughts, thunderstorms and weakened forests among them. Climate change is a global phenomenon, which Canada contributes to through the emission of greenhouse gases. Wildfires are also themselves huge contributors to emissions, creating a negative feedback loop.

Canada also continues to harvest huge quantities of trees, often replacing them with species that are more valuable for logging companies — and more prone to fire. 

In other words, the conditions continue to change in favour of bigger and more frequent fires across the country. 

As forests burn, it’s important to be clear about what causes wildfires — and what doesn’t — but also to focus on mitigation, preparedness and solutions for working with fires, particularly from Traditional Indigenous Knowledge.

So, what’s going on and what’s at stake when it comes to wildfires in Canada? The Narwhal’s got you covered:

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How our journalism makes a difference
Here at The Narwhal, we do journalism differently. As an independent non-profit, we’re accountable to you, our readers — not advertisers or shareholders. So we measure our success based on real-world impact: evidence that our reporting influenced citizens to hold power to account and pushed policymakers to do better.

Our stories have been raised in legislatures across the country and cited by citizens in petitions and letters to politicians.

Take our reporting on Alberta’s decision to allow cougar hunting in parks, which was cited in an official ethics complaint against the parks minister. And, after we revealed an oil and gas giant was permitted to sidestep the rules for more than 4,300 pipelines, the BC Energy Regulator started posting the exemptions it grants publicly.

This kind of work takes time, money and a lot of grit. And we can’t do it without the support of thousands of readers just like you.

Will you help us dig deep by joining as a monthly or yearly member, for any donation amount you can afford?

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We’re fighting for our right to report — and your right to know. Stay in the loop about our trial against the RCMP and get a weekly dose of The Narwhal’s independent journalism
Red text in bold, capital letters: JOIN OUR FIGHT FOR PRESS FREEDOM