As of October 6,6,551 fires had burned 184,961 square kilometres (71,414 sq mi),[2] about 5% of the entire forest area of Canada,[8] and more than six times the long-term average of 27,300 square kilometres (10,541 sq mi) for that time of the year.[1] As of mid-October, the total area burnt was more than 2.5 times the previous record.[9] Eight firefighters were killed, and 185,000 to 232,000 people were displaced,[3][4] including 16,400 in Nova Scotia's capital of Halifax, 21,720 in the Northwest Territories capital of Yellowknife, and almost 30,000 in British Columbia's Kelowna and West Kelowna.[10] Thousands of international firefighters travelled to Canada to combat the fires.[11][12]
Smoke emitted from the wildfires caused air quality alerts and evacuations in Canada and the United States.[13] In late June, the smoke crossed the Atlantic Ocean, reaching Europe.[14][15] Many of the largest fires were under control by July, including fires which had funnelled smoke into the Eastern Seaboard. However, significant fires continued well into the fall season, with several major fires breaking out in September.[16] Moderate-to-severe drought conditions from British Columbia to northern Ontario also continued into fall.[17] Though most of the fires were extinguished by winter, some in northern Alberta and British Columbia continued to smoulder in peat, reigniting the following February and starting the 2024 fires.[3]
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^ abcd"Fire Statistics". Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. Retrieved October 6, 2023.