World

Wildfire evacuation notice issued for major Canada oil town

May 12, 2024

Ottawa [Canada], May 12: An evacuation alert has been issued for Fort McMurray, Alberta, as an out-of-control fire rages southwest of the major Canadian oil town, making it among the first actions ahead of the wildfire season.
In a notice late on Friday, the Alberta government said the wildfire danger is "extreme" in the Fort McMurray Forest Area and out of control at 1,000 hectares (2,471 acres) in size.
It said strong winds are expected on Saturday, as a cold front continues to pass over the region. Helicopter pilots using night vision equipment surveilled the wildfire area overnight.
In 2016, a huge wildfire in Fort McMurray forced the evacuation of 90,000 residents and shut in more than a million barrels per day of oil output.
Residents in Saprea Creek Estates are also placed on alert from the municipality of Wood Buffalo. In British Columbia, the Northern Rockies Regional Municipality issued an evacuation order for the town of Fort Nelson.
The federal government has warned Canada faces another "catastrophic" wildfire season as it forecasted higher-than-normal spring and summer temperatures across much of the country, boosted by El Nino weather conditions.
Meeting with fire chiefs in West Kelowna, one of several B.C. communities that were forced to evacuate thousands of people last summer, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Friday that it was likely to be "a very bad forest fire season."
"People are worried about what the summer might bring. People are worried what the future might hold," he said.
Last year Canada endured its worst-ever fire season, with more than 6,600 blazes burning 15 million hectares, an area roughly seven times the annual average. Eight firefighters died and 230,000 people were evacuated from their homes.
Source: Fijian Broadcasting Corporation

More news

Natoe AI Reimagines Global Teleradiology with Its AI Co-Pilot, Solving Workflow Bottlenecks and Accelerating Diagnostic Reporting

New Delhi [India], October 16: Radiology worldwide is under sustained pressure. More than 3.6 billion diagnostic imaging exams are performed each year, including over 375 million CT scans and 100 million MRIs, yet the supply of qualified radiologists is not keeping pace with demand. The result is reporting backlogs, delayed diagnoses, and operational inefficiencies across hospitals and imaging centers. The gap between clinical need and available reporting capacity has become one of the most persistent challenges in modern care delivery.

Oct 16, 2025