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Experts call record-breaking heat wave temperatures 'extremely extreme'

Flare-ups are seen from the Christie Mountain wildfire along Skaha Lake in Penticton, B.C. Thursday, Aug. 20, 2020.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

Forestry experts are hoping for clear, blue skies as unprecedented hot weather pushes the wildfire risk in Western Canada to similar record-breaking levels.

A community in central British Columbia broke Canada's all-time heat record yesterday with a temperature of 46 C and even northerly cities like Edmonton are expected to near the 40 C mark this week.

Natural Resources Canada forest ecologist Yan Boulanger says the heat has cranked the wildfire risk up to what he calls "extremely extreme."

Wildfire scientist Mike Flannigan at the University of Alberta agrees.

But he says in an odd way, the heat itself is working in the forest's favour.

You know it's hot when the experts describe the record-smashing heatwave as "extremely, extreme." #heatwavebc

He says it's so hot that electrical storms aren't gathering and there are no storms in the immediate forecast to ignite a fire with a lightning strike.

But he warns that Canada is just at the start of the lightning season and a fiery summer could still break out.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 28, 2021.

The Canadian Press

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