World

Manitoba premier shoots back at U.S. lawmakers over smoke complaint

Manitoba's premier shot back on Thursday at six U.S. lawmakers who recently complained about Canadian wildfire smoke travelling south, which they said was making it difficult for some Americans to enjoy their summer.

Wab Kinew denounces 'ambulance chasers' as province struggles with devastating wildfires

Smoke rises as firetrucks head to a wildfire site.
Smoke rises from the Summit Lake wildfire, west of Fort Nelson, B.C., on June 9. (BC Wildfire via Reuters)

Manitoba's premier shot back on Thursday at six U.S. lawmakers who recently complained about Canadian wildfire smoke travelling south, which they said was making it difficult for some Americans to enjoy their summer.

"I've shaken the hands of American firefighters in northern Manitoba who are helping us out," said Premier Wab Kinew, whose province has endured a deadly and devastating wildfire season in which thousands of people have been forced to evacuate from their homes.

"I would challenge these ambulance chasers in the U.S. Congress to go and do the same, and to hear how much the American firefighting heroes who are here — how much they love our province."

"This is what turns people off politics," added Kinew. "When you've got a group of congresspeople trying to trivialize and make hay out of a wildfire season where we've lost lives in our province."

A letter signed by Republican House representatives Tom Tiffany and Glenn Grothman of Wisconsin; and Brad Finstad, Michelle Fischbach, Pete Stauber and Tom Emmer of Minnesota, was published Monday and addressed to Canada's ambassador in Washington.

WATCH | Kinew shoots back:

Letter from U.S. lawmakers 'trivializes' dangerous wildfire season, Manitoba premier says

4 hours ago
Duration 1:08
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew, when asked Thursday about a letter from a group of U.S. lawmakers taking issue with Canada's forest management, called them 'ambulance chasers' and accused them of trying to 'make hay' out of a dangerous wildfire season that has claimed lives in Manitoba.

"We write to you today on behalf of our constituents who have had to deal with suffocating Canadian wildfire smoke filling the air to begin the summer," it reads.

"In our neck of the woods, summer months are the best time of the year to spend time outdoors recreating, enjoying time with family, and creating new memories, but this wildfire smoke makes it difficult to do all those things," says the complaint, which can be read in full here.

The representatives ask how the federal government plans to mitigate the wildfire smoke, attributing "a lack of active forest management" as a major driver of Canadian wildfires, and suggesting that some of the fires began with arson.

"With all the technology that we have at our disposal, both in preventing and fighting wildfires, this worrisome trend can be reversed if proper action is taken."

Taken 'very seriously,' says embassy

Research shows that climate change, largely driven by fossil fuel use, is exacerbating wildfires in both Canada and the United States.

While a proportion of wildfires is caused by human activity — like unattended campfires — and a Quebec man pleaded guilty to arson last year after he was arrested for igniting 14 fires, there is no indication that widespread arson is behind the wildfires.

Lightning causes about half of them and burns the most area, per the Canadian National Fire Database. There are currently 526 active wildfires in Canada, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre.

"Canada takes the prevention, response and mitigation of wildfires very seriously," the Canadian Embassy said in a statement responding to the letter. "[The letter] has been shared with the relevant Canadian agencies. We will respond in due course."

Foreign Minister Anita Anand also addressed the letter, in response to a CBC reporter's question on Thursday.

"I know that the ministers responsible are going to be responding to this particular letter. I will also say that the G7 members had a unified statement on fighting forest fires," she said, referencing the Kananaskis Wildfire Charter, an agreement signed during the recent G7 summit that pledged co-operation on wildfire prevention and mitigation.

"It was part of their discussion, so I know there is some unity around the leaders' table on this issue," said Anand.

Natural Resources Canada told CBC News via an emailed statement that "Canadian firefighters, first responders and volunteers continue to work tirelessly to protect lives and property" from the present wildfires.

The department said it "actively collaborates with provinces, territories, Indigenous communities and international partners to address the impacts of wildfires."

CBC News has reached out to all six representatives multiple times for an interview. A spokesperson for Rep. Stauber declined the interview request. 

'Smoke blows both ways'

Lightning-caused fires are "often in remote areas that are difficult to get to and then very difficult to control," said Lori Daniels, a wildfire scientist at the University of British Columbia's Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences.

Some of the wildfires currently raging in Canada began in 2023 and are ongoing, she said. 

"Because of global warming, it is so hot and dry in the north that those fires [are] burning underground in the winter," Daniels said. "And then, in the spring and summer, coming back up to the surface again in these very remote areas and in ecosystems where it's incredibly difficult to stop the fires."

"So it's not that it's for lack of effort, but we're looking at extreme situations in very remote areas for those fires."

A sheen of red smoke hangs over a forest road.
A view shows Highway 89 with burned trees on one side and unburned trees on the other at the site of the Dixie Fire, a wildfire near the town of Greenville, Calif. on Aug. 7, 2021. (Fred Greaves/Reuters)

The representatives' letter does not mention that thousands of Canadians have been evacuated from their homes this wildfire season or that two Canadians died in Manitoba's Lac du Bonnet in May as a result of the fires. 

"Smoke blows both ways across that border," said Daniels.

Most recently, smoke from wildfires in California and Washington state have drifted northward, impacting air quality in Western Canada. 

"We have to recognize that we have the second-largest country in the world," said Glenn McGillivray, a wildfire mitigation expert and managing director at the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction in Toronto. "The boreal forest makes up about 60 per cent of our land mass.

"We're talking about an incredibly massive area."

He said that at least half of Canadian wildfires start with lightning. "To be able to say that we can manage the forest and reduce this substantially is, I think, a pipe dream."

Canada has used prescribed burning as a mitigation tactic in the past — a type of controlled fire that burns the buildup of fuel on forest floors to undercut the intensity of future wildfires, also making them easier to control or put out, according to Parks Canada.

LISTEN | How poor air quality can impact health: 

The practice, which originated in Indigenous communities, has a number of benefits for the natural ecosystem. "It's a question of having good fire on the landscape versus bad fires — these big, rip-roaring crown fires that burn huge areas," said McGillivray.

Both experts who spoke to CBC News noted that the health effects of wildfire smoke should be taken seriously. The smoke is an air pollutant that can impact people's health, according to the B.C. Centre for Disease Control.

It recommends a number of individual mitigation strategies to lessen the effects of wildfire smoke, such as wearing an N-95 mask if working outdoors, limiting outdoor exercise, using a HEPA air cleaner in your home, drinking water and monitoring local air quality indices.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jenna Benchetrit is the senior business writer for CBC News. She writes stories about Canadian economic and consumer issues, and has also recently covered U.S. politics. She was part of the team that won a silver Digital Publishing Award in best news coverage for covering the 2024 U.S. election. A Montrealer based in Toronto, Jenna holds a master's degree in journalism from Toronto Metropolitan University. You can reach her at jenna.benchetrit@cbc.ca.

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

The environment is changing. This newsletter is your weekly guide to what we’re doing about it.

...

The next issue of What on Earth will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.