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Canada PM Trudeau visits Alberta as wildfires rage

Canada PM Trudeau visits Alberta as wildfires rage

May 16, 2023

Alberta [Canada], May 16: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited Alberta on Monday as raging wildfires prompted mass evacuations and reduced energy production in Canada's main oil-producing province, where meteorologists expect virtually no rain for 10 days or so.
In the provincial capital Edmonton, Trudeau received an update on firefighting efforts by Canadian soldiers sent to help provincial firefighting and recovery efforts since Thursday. More troops are expected to join in the coming days, according to the Alberta government.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited Alberta on Monday as raging wildfires prompted mass evacuations and reduced energy production in Canada's main oil-producing province, where meteorologists expect virtually no rain for 10 days or so.
In the provincial capital Edmonton, Trudeau received an update on firefighting efforts by Canadian soldiers sent to help provincial firefighting and recovery efforts since Thursday. More troops are expected to join in the coming days, according to the Alberta government.
The forecast for Alberta shows a cold front sweeping through starting Tuesday evening that would bring gusty winds, a slight chance of a thunderstorm, but not much rain, said Sara Hoffman, a meteorologist with Environment Canada.
"We're very concerned about the possibility of dry lightning in an area that's already got a pretty high fire risk," Hoffman said. Hot and dry conditions are expected ramp up again from Friday and are unlikely to ease at least until early next week.
By Sunday afternoon, 89 fires were burning across Alberta, with 25 considered out of control and more than 19,000 evacuees. That was up from 74 fires and about 16,500 evacuees on Friday.
"Our peak burning period, which is when the temperatures are at their highest and the fuels are at their driest, is still in front of us," Alberta Wildfires official Josee St-Onge said at a briefing Sunday afternoon.
"It's too soon to say when we're going to see the peak of this wildfire season. . We are going to continue to be challenged."
Trudeau is due to leave for Seoul on Tuesday to meet South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, before moving on to Japan for a G7 summit starting Friday.
Benchmark Canadian heavy crude prices tightened last week to multi-month highs on concerns about the wildfires.
Late on Sunday, Paramount Resources (POU.TO) said that due to the fires a third-party gas processing plant and some Paramount fields were shut, and it had curtailed 45,000 boepd.
Vermilion Energy (VET.TO) said on Monday it had restored 60% of the 30,000 boepd that it previously shut in.
Source: Fijian Broadcasting Corporation