The Prague Post - Hazardous Canadian wildfire smoke choking millions in US

EUR -
AED 4.203144
AFN 75.536119
ALL 93.447923
AMD 419.536608
ANG 2.048935
AOA 1050.643499
ARS 1688.712374
AUD 1.635245
AWG 2.060085
AZN 1.94583
BAM 1.953056
BBD 2.304871
BDT 141.068075
BGN 1.965674
BHD 0.431553
BIF 3413.446719
BMD 1.144492
BND 1.475134
BOB 7.92427
BRL 5.85419
BSD 1.144397
BTN 110.255552
BWP 15.510341
BYN 3.315556
BYR 22432.038792
BZD 2.301566
CAD 1.606843
CDF 2586.551774
CHF 0.92532
CLF 0.026888
CLP 1058.231173
CNY 7.751929
CNH 7.752077
COP 3709.01172
CRC 520.071474
CUC 1.144492
CUP 30.329032
CVE 110.300346
CZK 24.214929
DJF 203.399042
DKK 7.475592
DOP 67.010172
DZD 152.24597
EGP 57.73595
ERN 17.167377
ETB 181.945581
FJD 2.566237
FKP 0.848033
GBP 0.849345
GEL 3.004345
GGP 0.848033
GHS 13.207748
GIP 0.848033
GMD 84.692623
GNF 10048.637886
GTQ 8.73077
GYD 239.423565
HKD 8.972987
HNL 30.72998
HRK 7.534993
HTG 149.570479
HUF 361.954683
IDR 20591.696017
ILS 3.458597
IMP 0.848033
INR 110.618049
IQD 1499.284225
IRR 1573676.190602
ISK 143.198564
JEP 0.848033
JMD 181.510978
JOD 0.811418
JPY 185.872902
KES 147.988207
KGS 100.085407
KHR 4603.146094
KMF 490.98698
KPW 1030.042675
KRW 1694.900443
KWD 0.353751
KYD 0.95366
KZT 538.865148
LAK 25836.901537
LBP 102489.238196
LKR 384.627846
LRD 207.609646
LSL 18.781133
LTL 3.379387
LVL 0.692292
LYD 7.313512
MAD 10.690741
MDL 20.089945
MGA 4921.314189
MKD 61.645904
MMK 2402.711543
MNT 4103.417768
MOP 9.240815
MRU 45.905034
MUR 53.825217
MVR 17.693922
MWK 1986.837831
MXN 19.937791
MYR 4.661628
MZN 73.144438
NAD 18.666635
NGN 1580.794687
NIO 41.945393
NOK 11.061341
NPR 176.409653
NZD 1.959259
OMR 0.440046
PAB 1.144392
PEN 3.871249
PGK 5.032307
PHP 70.588795
PKR 318.295088
PLN 4.330036
PYG 6940.09627
QAR 4.172833
RON 5.24074
RSD 117.355078
RUB 89.386396
RWF 1677.824942
SAR 4.28264
SBD 9.237607
SCR 15.391217
SDG 687.269505
SEK 11.036008
SGD 1.476617
SHP 0.854479
SLE 27.897004
SLL 23999.428685
SOS 654.075923
SRD 43.045527
STD 23688.669025
STN 24.721022
SVC 10.012712
SYP 126.503077
SZL 18.666558
THB 38.454351
TJS 10.556866
TMT 4.017166
TND 3.351931
TOP 2.755662
TRY 53.961069
TTD 7.77411
TWD 36.94282
TZS 3008.254282
UAH 51.072518
UGX 4223.084227
USD 1.144492
UYU 45.965209
UZS 13828.894631
VES 829.573183
VND 30046.914817
VUV 137.422655
WST 3.146795
XAF 655.039409
XAG 0.020599
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.093046
XCG 2.062511
XDR 0.813754
XOF 655.794356
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.078233
ZAR 18.770621
ZMK 10301.804477
ZMW 20.970532
ZWL 368.525885
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    67.35

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.1

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0750

    22.31

    -0.34%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3900

    18.32

    -2.13%

  • BCC

    4.1500

    80.14

    +5.18%

  • NGG

    -0.4000

    82.51

    -0.48%

  • GSK

    1.3200

    52.77

    +2.5%

  • BTI

    4.4300

    63.16

    +7.01%

  • BCE

    0.5400

    22.14

    +2.44%

  • RIO

    -2.9500

    90.67

    -3.25%

  • RELX

    0.5100

    34.02

    +1.5%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13

    0%

  • VOD

    0.5400

    15.62

    +3.46%

  • AZN

    0.9200

    169.29

    +0.54%

  • BP

    -0.2500

    41.08

    -0.61%

Hazardous Canadian wildfire smoke choking millions in US
Hazardous Canadian wildfire smoke choking millions in US / Photo: ANGELA WEISS - AFP

Hazardous Canadian wildfire smoke choking millions in US

The Manhattan skyline was obscured by thick haze and Chicago closed its beaches Thursday as out-of-control Canadian wildfires raged, sending smoke spewing into the United States and exposing millions of people to dangerously unhealthy air.

Text size:

US states near the Canadian border including Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois were particularly choked, while the Northeast including New York was also experiencing deteriorating air quality.

On Thursday evening, tracker IQAir said Chicago and Detroit were the top polluted cities in the world, with New York not far behind.

The most populous US city was shrouded by the smoke that state authorities warned contained fine particulate matter deemed unhealthy for everyone across the New York metro area and Long Island.

Even worse air enveloped the central and western regions of the state.

Authorities encouraged New Yorkers to spend as little time outside as possible, with Mayor Zohran Mamdani warning of the "serious threat" of heavy heat and unsafe air.

Libraries and train stations were offering free masks, while hundreds of cooling centers were open across the city for those without access to air conditioning.

"This could become the most significant smoke event in New York City since 2023, and conditions will be closely monitored for any deterioration," the city's Department of Emergency Management said.

That year, the city's skies turned an eerie orange, with the air quality index reaching a dangerous 465.

- 'Our chests feel tight' -

In the Midwest, current index levels on Thursday had soared beyond that figure, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency tracker.

Chicago along with Toledo, Ohio, and areas in Minnesota relatively close to the fires were well into the 700s on the air quality index during the afternoon, with much of the rest of the upper Midwest also experiencing AQI levels in the worst category of "hazardous."

A Major League Soccer match in Chicago was postponed as municipalities across the region postponed outdoor events.

Erin Lucey, 38, works on her family's organic vegetable farm in south-central Wisconsin and spent the morning harvesting zucchini, beans and cucumbers, among other tasks, with laborers wearing masks in muggy heat to filter out the hazy smoke blanketing the area.

"Our chests feel tight," she told AFP, saying the smoke combined with recent searing heat waves and parched fields left conditions feeling "eerie."

"We are all thinking of the delicate balance of growing food in this type of future, and remarking how we can't imagine what it will be like here in 100 years," she said.

"If people were outside like us working and seeing how everything looks, if they didn't have the convenience of air conditioning, we would be making much faster changes to address the climate crisis," she added.

The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy said it expected the dangerous conditions to continue through Friday, and that "our best model for smoke only predicts out to 48 hours."

"That model is currently showing improvements on Saturday, but it is likely that smoke will linger and recirculate for a while," the agency said.

- Evacuations in Canada -

Toronto was also grappling with the dangerous air quality, as the latest data in Canada showed more than 130 active fires in northwestern Ontario province, with at least 60 out of control.

Authorities there have formally requested additional assistance from the federal government, in particular seeking air support to evacuate remote communities.

The Ontario provincial police said 15 communities and their surrounding areas have been evacuated so far.

"More than 150 fire crews and nearly 50 firefighting aircraft are working around the clock to protect communities from the fires in northern Ontario," Ontario Premier Doug Ford said on X.

So far, Canadian wildfires have scorched at least 1.9 million hectares (4.7 million acres) this year, an area nearly the size of Slovenia.

That damage remains far off the pace of 2023, Canada's worst wildfire season on record, when nearly 18 million hectares burned in the country.

G.Kucera--TPP