British Columbia

B.C. wildfire crews hopeful heavy rain in forecast will dampen enormous Donnie Creek blaze

A special weather statement warning of heavy rain has been issued for the northeastern corner of the province, where the B.C.'s largest ever recorded wildfire has burned close to 6,000 square kilometres of forest land.

Up to 70 mm rain expected in northeast, where B.C.'s largest fire on record has burned almost 6,000 sq. km

An aerial shot shows a ridge of fire in a vast forest with smoke billowing along a straight line upwards into the sky as far as the eye can see.
Part of the Donnie Creek wildfire pictured in mid-June. The fire burning north of Fort St. John, B.C., is the largest ever recorded in the province. (B.C. Wildfire Service)

Crews fighting British Columbia's largest recorded wildfire are hoping a heavy, prolonged rain in the forecast can help them turn the corner on the massive blaze.

Environment Canada has issued a special weather statement for the northeastern corner of the province, where the Donnie Creek fire has burned close to 6,000 square kilometres of land.

The weather statement says a low-pressure system over Alberta will interact with the eastern Rockies, creating up to 70 millimetres of rain in northeastern B.C. through Thursday morning.

Prince George Fire Centre information officer Julia Caranci says the rain in the forecast is very good news, but the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) remains cautious because it may not fall evenly across the large area of the fire.


The Donnie Creek fire is the largest blaze on record in the 102-year history of provincial firefighting efforts, and its
massive size helped lift B.C. to a record wildfire season for area burned — which currently stands at almost 15,000 square kilometres.

Despite the rain, crews carried out a number of planned ignitions around the fire on Sunday, covering the northwest corner of the blaze, the BCWS said in a tweet.

A large wildfire burns in a square plot of land.
The Donnie Creek wildfire is burning in area with valuable timber and oil and gas facilities. (B.C. Wildfire Service)

It said the ignitions solidified containment lines against the fire, and Caranci says crews will now wait until this week's rain has passed before reassessing and determining if additional burns are necessary or possible.

While the rainfall will help, Caranci says current BCWS estimates show the precipitation will not be season-ending for the northern region's wildfires, and the Donnie Creek blaze is still anticipated to be active into the fall.

Still, Caranci says the rain will likely dampen things down over the next seven to 10 days, allowing firefighters some breathing room.

She says it will give them time to make headway on smaller objectives for their overall plan, since attacking a fire of this size requires them to fight portions of the blaze at a time.