2017 British Columbia wildfires | |
---|---|
Date(s) | Evacuations: July 6, 2017 – September 20, 2017[1] Provincial state of emergency: July 7, 2017 – September 15, 2017 |
Location | British Columbia, Canada |
Statistics | |
Burned area | 1,216,053[2] hectares (3,004,930 acres) as of December 5, 2017[2] |
Land use | Forest and residential |
Impacts | |
Deaths | 0 |
Non-fatal injuries | Unknown |
Structures destroyed | 444 |
Damage | Over $649,000,000 |
Ignition | |
Cause | Lightning and Human-Caused |
Motive | unknown |
Season | |
2018 → |
On July 6, 2017, a two-hectare wildfire began west of 100 Mile House, British Columbia, Canada marking the beginning of the record-breaking 2017 wildfire season in British Columbia.[3] On July 7, 56 new fires started throughout British Columbia (BC) leading to several evacuation alerts, orders and the declaration of a provincial state of emergency by the Government of British Columbia.[4] By September 12, 158 fires were burning throughout the province.[5] A total of 12,161 square kilometres (1.2 million hectares) had burned by the end of the 2017 fire season, the largest total area burned in a fire season in recorded history (1.3% of BC total area).[6] This record was broken the following year, with five of BC's worst 10 fire seasons occurring since 2010.[6] However, the 2017 fire season was also notable for the largest number of total evacuees in a fire season (65,000 people),[7] as well as for the largest single fire ever in British Columbia.[8] Research indicates that human-caused climate change played a significant role in the fires.[7]