An
unusually early and intense start to wildfire season has set
Canada on track for its worst-ever year as warm and dry
conditions are forecast to persist for months.
There are blazes in nearly all of Canada's 10 provinces and
territories, with Quebec the worst impacted due to multiple
fires caused by lightning.
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
issued a health advisory for counties including New York, Bronx,
and Queens.
The state recommended residents consider limiting strenuous
outdoor physical activity to reduce the risk of adverse health
effects.
The Canadian capital of Ottawa, which neighbors Quebec, was
covered in haze on Tuesday morning, with air quality in category
10+, the worst level on Environment Canada's Air Quality Health
Index, indicating "very high risk".
"Smoke plumes from local forest fires as well as forest fires in
Quebec have resulted in deteriorated air quality," Environment
Canada said in an air quality alert for Ottawa.
The air over Toronto was also polluted and conditions could
persist through most of this week, the government run weather
agency said.
Wildfire smoke can harm health even at low concentrations, and
people with lung or heart diseases as well as older adults,
children, and pregnant women were at higher health risk from
wildfire smoke, Environment Canada said.
Canada's Foreign Minister Melanie Joly on Tuesday thanked United
States, Mexico, South Africa and France for sending in
firefighters to help.
Wildfires are common in Canada's western provinces, but this
year flames have been mushrooming rapidly in eastern Canada,
forcing home evacuations and the federal government to send in
the military.
About 3.3 million hectares have already burned - some 13 times
the 10-year average - and more than 120,000 people have been at
least temporarily forced out of their homes.
"I want to highlight that people need to continue to listen to
local authorities on how to stay safe, including in places like
Ottawa that are affected by smoke from wildfires," Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters in Ottawa.
(Reporting by Ismail Shakil in Ottawa, editing by Ed Osmond and
Alistair Bell)
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