By Nivedita Balu
TORONTO, July 17 (Reuters) – Orange-hued skies, wildfire smoke and scorched forestland have been regular occurrences across North America in recent years as rising global temperatures contribute to massive forest fires. Many are in northern Canada, which is home to some of the world’s largest intact forests.
Canada has more active wildfires at present than it did at the same time in the last two years and a larger area has already burned this year compared to the 10-year average for the same period.
Here are some facts about the recent smoke and wildfires.
WHY DOES CANADA HAVE SO MANY WILDFIRES?
Canada, the world’s second-largest country in size, has nearly a tenth of the world’s total forest area and about 24% of the world’s boreal forests. Many of them are unreachable by road and uninhabited.
Forest fires are a natural process that kills off pests and clears out unhealthy shrubbery. But in recent years, the size and intensity of fires have increased.
Rising temperatures due to climate change mean drier forests. Drier forests allow fire to spread faster. Fires are often started by lightning or campfires in more populated areas.
Mike Flannigan, a professor of wildland fire at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia, noted the area burned in Canada has almost quadrupuled since the 1970s. Warmer temperatures have prolonged the wildfire season and more lightning is also causing fires, he said.
WHAT HAPPENED THIS WEEK?
As fires get bigger and more forest area is scorched, smoke follows the wind. Fires in northern and western Ontario as well as northern Minnesota brought the world’s worst air quality to Toronto earlier this week, then spread to New York and Washington. Detroit and Chicago by Friday had the world’s worst air quality.
CAN THE FIRES BE STOPPED?
While some fires are unavoidable, governments are trying to protect communities by closing forest areas to prevent human-caused fires, using non-flammable building materials in high-risk locations and being better prepared.
WHAT HAS CANADA DONE SO FAR?
The federal government has allocated more money to fight wildfires, including C$316.7 million ($227 million) for aerial firefighting capacity over five years and C$47.8 million for Parks Canada National Fire Management Program. The Ontario government spent C$271 million on emergency firefighting in 2025-26, crossing its budget of C$135 million. It has allocated C$150 million for 2026-27.
WHAT MORE COULD BE DONE?
After Canada’s biggest wildfire season by area burned in 2023, experts and politicians began calling for a national response organization. Those calls intensified after fires in 2024 engulfed a third of the tourist town of Jasper.
Canada is the only Group of Seven country without a federal agency focused on combating wildfires. Much of the firefighting responsibility falls to provinces.
In June 2026, the Canadian Senate published a report that called for a federal coordinating office for wildfires and emergency response and proposed funding a national fleet of modern firefighting aircraft, among other measures.
“Wildfires are now a crisis,” the report said, noting the record area burnt in recent years.
The federal government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Canada currently has roughly 126,000 firefighters who work for towns, villages, and cities, of which about 90,000 are volunteers. Only 3,000 to 5,000 firefighters are trained to tackle wildland fires across the country, Ken McMullen, the president of the Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs said. A centralized approach would help coordinating, training and moving firefighters and equipment across the country when needed, McMullen said.
WHAT ARE SOME OTHER AREAS WITH WILDFIRES?
The United States is also having an above-average fire year, with 3.7 million acres burned year-to-date in 2026 compared with a 10-year average of 2.7 million acres, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.
Fires in the U.S. west are burning with greater intensity and torching more acres after a record-low winter snowpack spread drought conditions to over 90% of the region, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
The United States has had 40,000 wildfires year-to date, well over its 10-year average of around 31,000 by this time of year, according to NIFC data.
In Europe, a wildfire in northeastern Spain that ripped through an area the size of San Francisco forced thousands to evacuate. Nearly 20 wildfires have been reported across England and Wales this summer and a historic forest near Paris burned, turning the skies black.
(Reporting by Nivedita Balu in Toronto additional reporting by Andrew Hay; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Deepa Babington)


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