What’s in store for Canada’s 2026 wildfire season?
Wildfire season may get off to a relatively quiet start in Canada but lingering drought and a warm summer could tip the scales towards another severe year, experts say.
Wildfire expert Mike Flannigan says this year will be his “litmus test” for whether Canada’s wildfire seasons, already in uncharted territory and fuelled by human-caused climate change, have entered a “new reality.”
“My narrative used to be, there’ll be bad fire years and there’ll be quiet years. I’m now beginning to think at a national scale most years are going to be bad fire years,” said Flannigan, a professor of wildland fire at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, B.C.
No one can precisely predict in April how Canada’s wildfire season will play out. A seasonal forecast can’t account for a fire’s ignition, such as a lightning strike, or the hot, dry and windy weather conditions that fuel individual fires and arrive on short notice.
