
Maps show how far smoke from Canadian wildfires has spread
Smoke from hundreds of wildfires in Canada has spread over 5,000 miles across the Atlantic over the last week — reaching as far as parts of Russia.
Western Greenland and the Arctic Archipelago have also experienced smoky skies — over 1,500 miles away from fires in Manitoba. Long-range transport of smoke has also been affecting the color of sunrises and sunsets in Ireland and the United Kingdom. Another smoke plume is forecast to arrive in the same region from this weekend into early next week, also affecting France and Germany.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Driving a Famed Highway to Learn Why It's Always Broken
Times Insider explains who we are and what we do, and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together. A couple of summers ago, I had friends visiting California, and I wanted to show them what many people who come to the state hope to see: the coast. We were making our way from Los Angeles to Northern California, and had planned to take the Pacific Coast Highway, which clings to the edge of the continent for hundreds of miles. But I found myself on Google Maps, trying to reroute us around a closure. Whatever I tried, it seemed we would have to backtrack. Instead, we took a largely inland route through vast plains and farmland. The Pacific Coast Highway (which is technically called California State Route 1, but is often referred to as the PCH or Highway 1) has always been troubled. Parts of the road, built more than a century ago on steep and unstable terrain, are prone to landslides. Other parts are at risk of collapsing into the sea. But over the past few years, frequent slides, erosion and fires have shut down sections of the route so many times that there has scarcely been a time when the whole stretch was open. I kept wondering about the famed highway: Why were parts of it almost always closed? Was climate change making the problems worse? And would California keep fixing it? I began talking to experts. Several months later, the Palisades fire shut another section in Malibu. In early May, the photographer Mark Abramson and I set off on a four-day road trip along one of the best-known stretches of the highway, between Los Angeles and San Francisco. We wanted to meet those who live, work and rely on the road that always keeps breaking, as well as those tasked with repairing it. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
Wildfires force another 1,000 residents from their homes in the Canadian province of Manitoba
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Wildfires forced another 1,000 people to flee their homes in Manitoba, one of two Canadian provinces under a state of emergency that has led to thousands of evacuations. Smoke from Canadian wildfires has worsened air quality in eastern Canada and the U.S. The fires have forced thousands of Canadians to flee their homes and sent smoke as far as Europe.

Associated Press
3 hours ago
- Associated Press
Wildfires force another 1,000 residents from their homes in the Canadian province of Manitoba
WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — Wildfires forced another 1,000 people to flee their homes in Manitoba, one of two Canadian provinces under a state of emergency that has led to thousands of evacuations. Smoke from Canadian wildfires has worsened air quality in eastern Canada and the U.S. The fires have forced thousands of Canadians to flee their homes and sent smoke as far as Europe. The town of Snow Lake, Manitoba issued a mandatory evacuation order for its residents Friday as a large wildfire threatens the area. That fire, which has now grown to more than 3,000 square kilometers (1,058 square miles), has already forced out all 5,000 residents of the city of nearby Flin Flon and a thousand more in surrounding cottages and homes. When the Snow Lake evacuees are added in, Manitoba has about 19,000 displaced from their homes. There are 27 total fires in the province of Manitoba, eight of them out of control. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said evacuees have found a place to stay with friends or family, in hotels or in congregate shelters. Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, premier of the neighboring province, said two people were charged with setting wildfires. He said one of them was charged in relation to a fire around La Ronge, Saskatchewan, which has forced 7,000 people to flee their homes. There are 24 active wildfires burning in the province of Saskatchewan, forcing between 10,000 and 15,000 people from their homes. 'Many if not virtually all of the fires that we're dealing with in Saskatchewan, although not intentionally, are human caused. Some of those have been intentionally human caused,' Moe said. The province is also under a state of emergency, making it easier for different levels of government to coordinate a response. Moe said they are in daily contact with the federal government but have not yet asked for the military to help airlift out evacuees as they have so far been able to get them out by road. He said the Red Cross is also working to set up congregate shelters for evacuees in Regina, Saskatoon and Prince Albert. Canada's wildfire season runs from May through September. Its worst-ever wildfire season was in 2023. It choked much of North America with dangerous smoke for months.