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Holdover wildfires: Why BC may see more overwinter fires this season

FILE PHOTO - Wildfire officials in British Columbia have expressed concern that last year's record season along with dry conditions have resulted in an increased risk of "holdover" fires in 2024. Flames from the Donnie Creek wildfire burn along a ridge top north of Fort St. John, B.C. on Sunday, July 2, 2023.
Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP/Noah Berger

FORT NELSON, B.C. - One of the largest wildfires burning in Western Canada is the Patry Creek fire, 25 kilometres north of Fort Nelson, B.C., which re-emerged May 2 after smouldering through the winter.

It has now been measured at 700 square kilometres in size.

Patry Creek is a so-called holdover fire, and wildfire officials in British Columbia have expressed concern that last year's record fire season, along with continued drought conditions, will mean more such fires remain a threat.

Here's a closer look at what holdover fires are and their threat to Western Canada.

What are holdover fires?

The BC Wildfire Service defines a holdover as "a fire that remains dormant and undetected for a considerable time after it starts."

The service said in a blog post in February that such blazes are especially common with lightning-caused fires, large-scale wildfires or those happening with dry fuels seven centimetres or deeper underground.

When the conditions are right, fires burning deep underground can "slumber" undetected, simmering even under snow for possibly months after ignition.

These fires can then emerge when the weather warms and dries in the spring, as was the case with Patry Creek, which overlaps with a wildfire area that initially ignited by lightning in July 2023.

Is this a new phenomenon?

"It's certainly something that, as an agency, we have dealt with holdover fires for my entire career for 21 years," said BC Wildfire Service director of operations Cliff Chapman. "This is not a new situation for British Columbia."

Holdover fires are also not unique to British Columbia. Chapman said firefighters in Alberta and Manitoba have also seen such fires this year.

What has changed, Chapman said, was the more than 28,000 square kilometres of land that burned in B.C. last year, which when combined with drought conditions has "amplified" the risk stemming from such wildfires.

In January, more than 100 wildfires were still listed as burning in B.C., a number much higher than the typical few dozen holdovers from year to year, according to BC Wildfire Service spokesman Forrest Tower.

The B.C. River Forecast Centre says persistent drought conditions in B.C. stretch back to 2022 and the province is heading into this summer with "multi-year" precipitation deficits, with the average snowpack level lower than ever recorded.

Why can't these fires be put out during the winter?

Chapman said the wildfire service does plan for holdovers, and concern of their emergence this spring was one reason why teams were already in Fort Nelson before attention was turned to the Parker Lake blaze which now threatens the community and forced 4,700 people from their homes.

Detection of holdover fires is a major challenge because of how deep they can burn, Chapman said.

"It is important to note that just because the fires were underground, there was still snow on top of these fires," he said. "They were not producing heat signatures for a big portion of the winter.

"We had very limited heat signatures until it started to become snow-free."

Tower said the depth of the holdover fires present another challenge, even when they are found.

"It's just how deep some of these fires burned and the size of them," he said in January. "It takes a ton of manual labour to dig deep enough or to access some of these more remote fires."

What can be done to reduce the threat of holdover fires?

Chapman said the Fort Nelson wildfire experience is likely something that the wildfire service will learn from in terms of anticipating the impact of future holdover fires.

He said the wildfire service will continue to work with land-users and other levels of government to understand where fires are simmering from year to year, in order to deal with future recurrences.

But the key may be to stop as many fires as possible from being started in the first place, Chapman said.

"The answer to a lot of these questions is really in prevention," he said. "It's really in FireSmart, it's really in using the BC Wildfire Service initiatives, the ministry initiatives, trying to create a more resilient land base, which is a much broader question."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 16, 2024.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2024
The Canadian Press

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