“The wildfire situation has taken another turn for the worse, with the fire burning west of Yellowknife now representing a real threat to the city,” said Shane Thompson, the territory’s environment and climate change minister.
“I want to be clear that the city is not in immediate danger, and there’s a safe window for residents to leave the city by road and by air,” he told a news conference Wednesday evening. But he urged residents to leave by noon local time on Friday in a phased evacuation.
“Without rain, it is possible [the fire] will reach the city outskirts by the weekend,” he said. “You put yourself and others at risk if you choose to stay later.”
Sitting on the north side of the expansive Great Slave Lake, Yellowknife is about 350 miles south of the Arctic Circle and 600 miles north of Edmonton, or 900 miles north of the international border with the United States.
Photos showed a long line of cars heading southward along the only main highway out of Yellowknife, where the approaching flames risk cutting off access to nearby communities as soon as Friday. Authorities have told residents to head toward Alberta.
People who cannot leave by car, are immunocompromised or have conditions that put them at higher risk were asked to sign up for evacuation flights scheduled to start Thursday.
Residents lined up at gas stations Wednesday night to fill up their tanks and make their way out of Yellowknife. “I’m nervous about my home here,” one man told Canadian outlet Global News from his car. “The threat is real. I saw it for myself. The smoke is right there,” he said.
Smoke pouring out of the wildfires has also led to low visibility and unhealthy air quality across the region, with some plumes blowing hundreds of miles downwind, worsening air quality as far south as along the northern Rockies, including Idaho and Montana. In those areas, Canada wildfire smoke is mixing with pollutants from fires also raging in the Pacific Northwest.
Gas and tow trucks will be available along the highway, along with pilot vehicles to help evacuees out of smoky areas, Canadian media reported.
Nearby residents, including Indigenous communities in the Northwest Territories, were also ordered to evacuate as officials described the situation as “unprecedented.”
Wildfires in Canada have charred nearly 33 million acres (13.3 million hectares) around the country, burning twice as much land as any previous season — an area equivalent to Alabama or nine Connecticuts.
Hundreds of fires are still burning across the country as record-challenging heat, intensified by climate change, combines with long-term drought to fuel the flames.
The most intense wildfire activity in the past week has focused on Quebec and the Northwest Territories, The Washington Post reported.
Flames in the Northwest Territories have already forced communities to evacuate in recent days. The hamlet of Enterprise, near the Alberta border with Northwest Territories, was razed earlier this week.
One evacuee from the town of Hay River told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. that her car began melting as she and her family drove through embers to escape.
Contending with more than 200 fires in their province alone, authorities in the Northwest Territories declared a provincial state of emergency earlier this week. Firefighters have faced erratic winds in recent days, allowing flames to advance closer to Yellowknife than initially anticipated.
“Throughout this all, we continue to do everything possible to slow the growth of the fire,” Yellowknife Mayor Rebecca Alty said.