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Smoke from wildfires in Manitoba, a Western province facing its worst fire season in 30 years, has created hazardous air ...
The current infrastructure also isn’t set up to fully account for the shifting behavior of wildfire smoke, which can travel ...
Wildfires are forecast to expand through the summer in Western Canada and parts of the north.
As violence against emergency workers continues to rise in Winnipeg, firefighters are demanding action. The union ...
FALL RIVER, Mass. — A Massachusetts assisted-living centre where nine residents died in a fire was cited for failing to ...
As wildfires and climate risks threaten Canada's power grid, AI is stepping in to ensure reliable 24/7 electricity for homes ...
Canadian wildfire smoke is back again. How bad will it get? Smoke will likely be an ongoing health hazard across North America for the next few months. Here's what to expect.
More than 200 wildfires are blazing across Canada, forcing 27,000 people to evacuate and creating hazardous air quality all over the U.S.
Two years after a historically devastating summer, Canada is once again facing a massive fire season, with burned areas already exceeding year-to-date averages from recent years.
Two years ago, Canada had its most destructive series of wildfires ever, and one expert says the country is currently on track this year to repeat that record-setting wildfire season in 2023.
About 17,000 residents of Manitoba in central Canada have been evacuated because of nearly two dozen active wildfires.
So many trees burned during Canada’s wildfires last year that the forest emitted more carbon than most countries’ fossil fuel emissions for 2022, a new study found.