An entire city of 80,000 people in Canada was just evacuated because wildfires destroyed it
"It was burning ash." Shams Rehman, resident of Ft. McMurray, Alberta, Canada.
I know I just posted a climate change related story to the front page, but I can't think of a bigger, more ironic story, than this one: an entire city of 80,000 people, a boom town in the heart of the tar sands production fields in western Canada, has been evacuated by the Canadian government because of massive and rapidly advancing wildfires brought on by drought conditions.
![](http://www.boomantribune.com/site-files/Alberta_wildfire.jpg)
Here are excepts from the Globe and Mail report, which contain eyewitness testimony from the evacuees, people I consider climate change refugees:
“There was smoke everywhere and it was raining ash. I’ve never seen anything like it,” [Shams Rehman] said after his family reached an evacuation centre in the resort town of Lac La Biche, Alta. “I just wanted to get out of that mess. I just wanted to get my family to somewhere safe.” [...]
“People were driving everywhere – it was absolute chaos in town. There were people stuck in ditches, driving across the grass and on sidewalks,” Mr. Bickford said at the Lac La Biche evacuation centre. “You just couldn’t see two feet in front of your truck through all the smoke.”
It took them two hours to cover four kilometres. As they pushed south, through bumper-to-bumper traffic, he said he looked in his rearview mirror and all he saw was smoke.[...]
Radhika Shukla fled her home in Fort McMurray’s Parsons Creek neighbourhood.
“In downtown, the fire was on both sides” of the street, she said, just before her crew was taken to the old retirement home in Lac La Biche. [...]
Cassie White, 19, said she feared for her life as she tried to flee the area, only to be turned around near Gregoire, near the south end of Fort McMurray.
“On the left was a big gas station. The flames jumped over the highway and blew up the gas station. It was torched,” said Ms. White, who was making her way to Edmonton with her boyfriend. “People were driving on the shoulder. There were flames maybe 15 feet high right off the highway. There was a dump truck on fire – I had to swerve around it – and there was a pickup truck on fire as well. The entire trailer park on my right was in flames. Roofs were coming down.”[...]
Late Tuesday afternoon, municipal Councillor Allan Vinni said a significant portion of the Abasand Heights neighbourhood in Fort McMurray had been lost. He was in the area as the fire approached, trying to help an employee and her daughter get out.
He saw a wall of flames almost 12 metres high only a block away from his car. They were fortunate to get out in time.
“I’m covered in ash here,” he said in a phone interview. “It’s still burning like hell up there.
This is, once again, uncharted territory, reminiscent of the forced evacuation of New Orleans before and after Hurricane Katrina. The fires became so extreme and unpredictable that a Canadian wildfire information officer told reporters that, "it isn’t safe for firefighters to be on the ground.” And now, a prosperous boom town, largely thanks to the extraction of fossil fuels from local tar sands, is likely gone for good. It should be noted the oil and gas workers at those nearby tar sands facilities were part of that exodus.
Some oil and gas companies said they would reduce output and downsize their staffing plans in response to the blaze.
Suncor Energy Inc. (NYSE:SU), a top Canadian oil producer, said it was reducing production at its regional facilities to “allow employees and their families to get to safety.” The Calgary-based company's plant is located about 16 miles north of Fort McMurray and is “in a safe condition,” it said in a statement late Tuesday.
Nexen, a subsidiary of the China National Offshore Oil Corp., was working on a modified staffing plan at its nearby Long Lake oil sands project, a Nexen spokeswoman told Bloomberg.
My what a measured response to what one resident described as like Armagedon. Of course, most of Alberta, a province roughly the size of Texas, was placed on a high fire alert two days ago, when a "total of 31 wildfires [were] burning across Alberta, with two considered out of control on Tuesday afternoon." Oh, and did I mention the province is in the midst of a heat wave with temperatures in the mid 80's F?
Perhaps the cable TV shows, between infomercials for non-stop coverage of Clinton and Trump, will find the time to report about this disaster. My guess is they might give it a 60 second spot during their non-peak viewing hours, since prime time is, of course, reserved for more important topics like whether Cruz voters can be convinced to hop on the Trump bandwagon, or why hasn't Bernie Sanders just ended his damn campaign, already.
Odds are that if they do air any coverage of this story, they won't bother to make the connection to global warming and climate change brought about by the very products that made Ft. McMurray a wealthy town before drought, high temperatures and high winds created the conditions for eradicating it yesterday. Which, as we all know, would be par for the course in America, the least educated, least informed nation regarding the ongoing climate crisis. Yay for American exceptionalism. Anywhere else in the world people are making the connection between these extreme events and climate change, even in the Vatican. Here? It's just some more weird weather. God sure has a funny sense of humor, eh?
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Comments
Wildfire is terrifying
I was forced out from my place about 15 years ago. I only lost a couple of acres on the far side of the property. I was lucky. Real lucky.
No time to prepare ... I was working outdoors, saw some smoke (the whole valley had been burning, mushroom clouds of smoke everywhere, so I knew what it meant), and phoned it in. About 15 minutes later I decided better safe than sorry and started packing. What do you take if you have to leave NOW and may never get to come back? Before I finished a government truck pulled in and told me it was time to go. Maybe 30 minutes from first smoke to "hit the road". Then I was parked out on the road for a while, blocked out, and watching the wall of flames, thinking about all the things I should have done. Scared and helpless. That's what wildfire means.
It turned out OK for me.
At least with a hurricane you have a couple days warning.
You are correct and astute in calling these folks "climate refugees". That was my first thought when I saw your title and came in to mention it. It won't be long until it's all of us.
It snowed here last weekend, the forecast has more snow later this week. Damned winter just won't end. At least things won't burn for a while...
"The greatest shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function." -- Albert Bartlett
"A species that is hurtling toward extinction has no business promoting slow incremental change." -- Caitlin Johnstone
Connecting dots...
Isn't a talent we're known for in the US. In fact the pervasive sense is that opinion is as valid as science...or the same thing. Using data is a foreign concept I guess. And all the while big media beating the drum of ignorance..loudly!
Willful stupidity aside, the outcomes are tragedies when we refuse to face facts and connect dots. I'm afraid we are only seeing the start of extreme weather events...wild vacillations. Leave it in the ground! And there is this fire surrounding the sand oil fields. I don't know if it is a sense of God's humor or just irony. It certainly is sad.
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
I know several people
Who fought the fires in the Northern Cascades last summer. Most of them are long time veteran professionals. The consensus has been it was overwhelming and they were in way over their heads trying to fight it.
I first wondered when hearing about the fires
if it was the tar sands themselves burning. I think I heard a very short blip on them on NBC "news" last night, which I only watch for the propaganda value now - to see what makes the "news" and groan, but not every night.
And the irony that evacuees are also being housed at the oil camps, which are supposedly still safe.
I will fully admit here, and take my chances doing it, that I really did not think I would see the full effects of climate change in my lifetime. Yup, I read, I get it, and still I thought that it might not really get bad until long after I am dead. Well, hah. It's going to get worse faster from here on out I think. And it's so damned sad, making me tear up now just thinking about the utter waste of people's lives, all for profit. When is enough money ever enough for these people?
Only a fool lets someone else tell him who his enemy is. Assata Shakur
The tar sands are 30 km (18.6 miles) away
from Fort McMurray. The oil companies are shutting down partially because their work force has evacuated Fort McMurray the nearest city, the only city nearby.
Here's the map of climate in North America heating up.
To thine own self be true.
Those poor people
have lost so much. According to Reuters, there have been no reports of fatalities but not much will be known until the fire dies out and workers can clear the area.
It isn't easy to evacuate 80,000 people. And that's a lot of homeless folks to shelter somehow.
Life is strong. I'm weak, but Life is strong.
From CBC Businsss News
Fort McMurray's horrifying experience shows humans can't stand in nature's way
Residents witnessed the kind of inferno that even professional firefighters seldom see
By Don Pittis, CBC News Posted: May 04, 2016 3:39 PM ET| Last Updated: May 04, 2016 3:39 PM ET
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CBC is reporting (at 6:17 PM EDT) that the whole province of Alberta is now under a state of emergency.
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First Nations News
::SIGH::
I'm so sad for them up there -- and so grateful to my homeowners insurance company for sponsoring wildfire intervention teams to help their insured and help the firefighters where their insurees have houses and property.
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Muerte al fascismo. Muerte a la tiranía. colapso total de los que promueven tampoco. A la pared con el unico porciento%
I Am Very Sorry For their Losses
Those who continue to deny climate change should have to compensate them all.
Vowing To Oppose Everything Trump Attempts.
French news (France 24)
Just reported 100,000 have been evacuated.
So, adopting Alfred E Neumann as their mascot didn't work out.
The only sliver of silver lining I see is that the problem hit the very workers most responsible for exacerbating the conditions beyond all sanity. But I'd much prefer that it had been all the top execs.
A few updates
From Global News
May 4 1pm MT
"88,000 people have been evacuated so far ... 17,000 people were north of the city. 8,000 were in Anzac, 9,000 in Lac La Biche and 18,000 in Edmonton ... In Edmonton, the Expo Centre was converted into an emergency shelter. They have accommodation for roughly 1,300 people ... The drive from Fort McMurray to Edmonton ... normally a 5-hour drive took as long as 10 hours"
May 4 10pm MT
"... shifting weather patterns prompted a mandatory evacuation order of Anzac, Gregoire Lake Estates and Fort McMurray First Nation ... Displaced Fort McMurray residents had taken refuge at the Anzac Recreation Centre, about 50 kilometres south of Fort McMurray ... they were also evacuating their emergency operations centre (EOC) in Long Lake ... It’s the second time the EOC had to be moved on Wednesday ... roughly 1,600 structures in Fort McMurray have been destroyed or damaged by a wildfire that raged through the city Tuesday night ..."
"The greatest shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function." -- Albert Bartlett
"A species that is hurtling toward extinction has no business promoting slow incremental change." -- Caitlin Johnstone
Where I live is at high risk
we are having rain right now, long may it continue...
To thine own self be true.
Interestingly, my
...home and car insurance company, MUTUAL OF ENUMCLAW here in W. Washington, just offered free of charge, enrolment in the Wildfire Defense team inclusion should a wildfire threaten my home -- and I have it insured to the gills, including contents, as I own it and my stuff, outright. No mortgage. You can be included by a wildfire team coming in to do whatever is necessary without damaging the house or contents to protect it from a wildfire, if the house is in the path. That includes ripping out and cutting down all landscaping, moving any firewood, flammables outside, etc...
You have to opt out ..not opt in..
They SEE the forests up here drying up with climate change.. already... they GET it.
Doesn't even take frakking to get them proactive.
I trust these people as insurance companies go. They have the same historical GOOD reputation my credit union does, and I picked the firm based on its confidence rating and on the LOW number of lawsuit involving claim denials they made, and they're careful about inspections and avoiding insuree fraud as well as making sure the firms a client wants to use to repair damage has a *good reputation for it work and the contents of the materials used.
I look at how people in frakking states are being thrown under the bus by insurance companies who won't STAND UP WITH THEM AND FIGHT FRAKKING.... and who deny claims from fires, water pollution making the homes unlivable and to prove it killing the landscape and underlying water table.....
For now I feel like a bullet has been dodged... and still I wait for a shoe to drop in my life...
I wish those people well and I wish I had a shitload of stuff to send them... I don't. I'm typing on a decades old worn out puter wearing a 15 year old T shirt to sleep in, and will be getting up and wearing my daily uniform... ANCient JEANS, WORN OUT BRA AND T, OLD WORN OUT UNDERWEAR. SHOES ON THEIR LAST LEGS...
I SO wish them a good recovery from this.
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Muerte al fascismo. Muerte a la tiranía. colapso total de los que promueven tampoco. A la pared con el unico porciento%
This is horrible
n/t