Canadians drive thru burning city seeking safety

Fort McMurray, May 7

Canadian police led convoys of cars through the burning ghost town of Fort McMurray yesterday in a risky operation to get thousands of people to safety on the other side.

Monster forest fires were continuing to burn out of control in the parched region, and could potentially double in size by the end today, said Chad Morrison, senior manager of wildfire prevention at the Alberta Agriculture and Forestry Division.

The blaze in Alberta’s oil sands region will not be extinguished for “a very long time” until there is significant rain, he said. There was a 30 per cent chance of rain on Sunday, the Canadian government forecast said, followed by sunny conditions on Monday. More rain was possible later in the week.

In the latest harrowing chapter, convoys of 50 cars at a time made their way through Fort McMurray at about 50-60 kilometres per hour, TV footage showed.

Police took up positions at intersections along the way to keep evacuees from detouring to try to salvage belongings from charred homes and make sure the route remains safe from the fire, which has encircled the town of 100,000, now evacuated.

Three army helicopters hovered above to sound the alert if the flames got too close to the road, Highway 63, or cut it off completely, as has happened in recent days.

Those being evacuated —for a second time, after first abandoning their homes — had fled this week to an area north of the city where oil companies have lodging camps for workers.

But officials concluded they were no longer safe there because of shifting winds that raised the risk of them becoming trapped, and needed to move south to other evacuee staging grounds and eventually to Edmonton, 400 kilometres to the south.

Some 8,000 people were airlifted out of the northern enclave on Thursday on helicopters and planes. Officials expect the road convoys for the remaining 17,000 will take around four days.

Security camera footage from the inside of one family’s home underscored the speed at which the blaze could overcome any stragglers. Thick grey smoke filled the living room within 30 seconds, while flames quickly ate away a wall.

Television footage earlier this week showed trees ablaze on the edge of highways crowded with bumper-to-bumper traffic trying to leave town. Bright embers whizzed wildly through the air and floated down onto cars, like hot, orange rain.

“We understand that this is still an active situation. The wildfires are still raging,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a press conference yesterday. Evacuees are finding shelter with friends, family and even strangers close to Fort McMurray but also as far away as Edmonton and Calgary, Trudeau said. The government has declared a state of emergency in Alberta.

Alberta has been left bone-dry after a period of unusually scant rainfall and unseasonably high temperatures.

More than 1,100 fire fighters are battling 49 separate blazes across the province — seven of them totally out of control.

The fires have engulfed 100,000 hectares of forest including at least 12,000 in the area surrounding Fort McMurray, where 2,000 homes have been destroyed.

Oil companies have pulled out non-essential employees, and analysts said all three have slashed output by a total of a million barrels a day.

The cuts amount to around a quarter of the country’s entire production, and one-third of Alberta’s, and mean a loss of tens of millions of dollars per day in income.