Alberta declares emergency as fires threaten Canada oil town
FORT
MCMURRAY, Alberta (AP) -- Alberta declared a state of emergency
Wednesday as crews frantically held back wind-whipped wildfires that
have already torched 1,600 homes and other buildings in Canada's main
oil sands city of Fort McMurray, forcing more than 80,000 residents to
flee.
Alberta
Premier Rachel Notley said fire had destroyed or damaged an estimated
1,600 structures. Flames are being kept from the downtown area thanks to
the "herculean'" efforts of firefighters, said Scott Long of the
Alberta Emergency Management Agency. No injuries or fire related
fatalities have been reported.
The
fire appeared near the airport late Wednesday where crews were onsite.
All commercial flights in and out of Fort McMurray have been suspended.
Unseasonably
hot temperatures combined with dry conditions have transformed the
boreal forest in much of Alberta into a tinder box. Fort McMurray is
surrounded by wilderness in the heart of Canada's oil sands — the third
largest reserves of oil in the world behind Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
Danielle
Larivee, Alberta's minister of municipal affairs, said the fire is
actively burning in residential areas. More than 250 firefighters are
battling the blaze. An update from the Municipality of Wood Buffalo
later in the evening indicated the fire was continuing to claim homes
and had destroyed a new school.
Fatalities
have been reported from a collision on a nearby highway but she was
unaware if it was related to the evacuation or fire.
There
were haunting images of scorched trucks, charred homes and telephone
poles, burned out from the bottom up, hanging in the wires like little
wooden crosses.
Some
residents were evacuated for a second time late Wednesday when they
were told to leave their emergency accommodations in the nearby hamlet
of Anzac.
Officials
said changing weather patterns forced the move. There had been 2,500
evacuees registered at the local recreation center, although it was not
known how many were still there when they were told to get on buses for
Edmonton further to the south.
Alberta
Premier Rachel Notley flew up to survey the situation, and tweeted
pictures of the fire from above. "The view from the air is
heartbreaking," she wrote
The blaze effectively cut Fort McMurray in two late Tuesday, forcing about 10,000 north to the safety of oil sands work camps.
The
other 70,000 or so were sent streaming south in a bumper-to-bumper
snake line of cars and trucks that stretched beyond the horizon down
Highway 63. Some vehicles sat in ditches, the victims of engine trouble
or a lack of gas.
Firefighters
were working to protect critical infrastructure, including the only
bridge across the Athabasca River and Highway 63, the only major route
to the city in or out.
Notley
called it the biggest evacuation in the history of the province.
Federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale called it one of the
largest fire evacuations in Canadian history, if not the largest. "It's a
community of 88,000 people that's been totally evacuated," Goodale
said. "This is going to take a while to recover."
Canadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said while the full extent of the damage
isn't yet known he called it "absolutely devastating" and said there's a
loss on a scale that's hard to imagine. Trudeau said he's offered the
province his government's full support. He encouraged Canadians to
support friends and donate to the Red Cross.
Trudeau
noted climate change is contributing to an increase in extreme weather
and fires but said it's difficult to establish a direct link.
Most
oil sands projects are well north of the community, while the worst of
the flames were on the city's south side. Allen said he's not aware of
any threat to oil facilities but called the fire a "moving animal."
Notley
said about 10,000 evacuees moved north where oil sands work camps were
being pressed into service to house evacuees. The bulk of the evacuees
fled south to Edmonton and elsewhere, and officials said they eventually
would like to move everyone south.
Shell
said it has shut down production at its Shell Albian Sands mining
operations— about 60 miles north of the city — so they can focus on
getting families out of the region. Suncor, the largest oil sands
operator, said it is reducing production at its regional facility -
about 15 miles north of the city. Many other companies evacuated
non-essential staff.
Chelsie
Klassen, a spokeswoman for The Canadian Association of Petroleum
Producers, said all large oil sands facilities have emergency crews and
plans for forest fires, noting all personnel would be evacuated and
facilities would be properly shut to minimize the damage. She noted 80
percent of the oil sands is located deep underground and can only be
extracted through a drilling process. The remaining twenty percent is
minable from the surface and predominantly located north of Fort
McMurray. She said it can burn under certain circumstances, however oil
sands would burn at a much slower pace considering its composition with
sand.
Former
National Hockey League player Doug Sulliman said he could see from his
apartment balcony that both sides of the highway south were engulfed in
flames and estimated hundreds of homes in the Beacon Hill suburb over
the hill were destroyed. "You could hear the pop, pop, pop because of
the propane tanks. The fire was just consuming these houses. It just
destroyed the whole community," he said.
He
said the highway later opened and it was bumper to bumper and said
there were many cars on the side of the road because service stations
were out of fuel. "There was a Shell gas station that blew up and a
Denny's next door. There was nothing but the foundation and it was still
smoldering in flames," he said.
___
Associated Press reporter Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this report
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