‘Aggressive’ human-caused wildfire near Harrison Lake grows to 800 hectares – BC | 24CA News

Canada
Published 08.06.2023
‘Aggressive’ human-caused wildfire near Harrison Lake grows to 800 hectares – BC | 24CA News

First noticed on June third, the Chehalis River wildfire has now ballooned to over 800 hectares, because it worsens the air high quality throughout the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley.

The wildfire is positioned round 10 kilometres west of Harrison lake and simply north of Chehalis Lake. The hearth is now listed as a Wildfire of Note, based on the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS).

“This fire has experienced growth with active burning conditions over the last two days. Crews and staff are evaluating objectives and suppressing available perimeter,” reads a press release from the Coastal Fire Centre.

The hearth’s new standing means it’s extremely seen or poses a possible menace to public security.

However, its development and visibility haven’t led hearth crews to advocate any evacuation orders or alerts right now.

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Click to play video: 'Highway 4 remains closed due to Vancouver Island wildfire'

Highway 4 stays closed attributable to Vancouver Island wildfire


The BCWS supplied an replace Wednesday afternoon, saying the hearth was rising away from populated areas within the Agassiz-Harrison space.

Another smaller wildfire can also be burning close by, west of the Chehalis River.

The Statiu Creek Wildfire is out-of-control and round 73 hectares in dimension.

The BCWS says this smaller hearth shouldn’t be responding to suppression efforts. Due to its proximity to populated areas, it says the hearth is the best precedence for crews within the Fraser Valley.

However, no evacuation orders or alerts have been issued because of the Statiu Creek Wildfire both.

Both fires proceed to contribute to the poor air high quality, which varies extensively throughout the area as smoke, winds, temperatures and hearth habits change.

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The Metro Vancouver Regional District issued the air high quality advisory Wednesday afternoon, warning of excessive concentrations of effective particulate matter (PM2.5) and ground-level ozone.

The advisory covers Metro Vancouver’s northeast and southeast, together with the central and jap Fraser Valley.

“Two out-of-control wildfires burning near Harrison Lake are producing considerable smoke that is contributing to degraded air quality and hazy conditions,” the district stated within the advisory.

You can see updated air high quality scores for the Lower Mainland right here.

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