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The blaze in Jasper fueled a wider disinformation firestorm

#62 of 70 articles from the Special Report: Climate of denial
A wildfire burns as an empty street in Jasper, Alta. is shown in this Thursday, July 25, 2024 handout photo from the Jasper National Park Facebook page. Handout Photo/Facebook, Jasper National Park

As news spread Thursday morning that the town of Jasper, Alta., had been torched by wildfire overnight, a post appeared on X (formerly Twitter) suggesting the disaster could have been prevented if "TRUDEAU and his team wasn't so focused on sending money to other Countries," and accompanied by a clip of the burned-out town.

The post, by the X user @MelissaLMRogers, racked up nearly 280,000 views and over 880 comments by mid-afternoon. Dozens of users laid blame for the fire on the federal government; some hinted at a longstanding conspiracy that claims the wildfires that have torched western Canada in recent years are part of a plot by Trudeau to control Albertans.

Later in the day, X/Twitter user @Martyupnorth posted to the platform claiming that suggesting that a suite of wildfires that burned down Alberta towns dating back to 2001 were an effort to make Alberta "comply" with a so-called "climate scam."

Within three hours, that post had racked up nearly 50,000 views and more than 400 comments.

Both of the X/Twitter users appear to have close links with Canada's right-wing movement. On her Youtube channel, @MelissaLMRogers – who goes by Melissa Rogers on the platform – highlights several videos from the 2022 Freedom Convoy in Ottawa. For his part, @martyupnorth does not hide his politics, noting he is a "libertarian" in his X/Twitter bio and has been a featured guest on dozens of right-wing Youtube channels in recent years.

Jasper officials say Jasper is not yet safe from the flames. Still, even when they die down the disaster's online firestorm appears poised to continue.

The posts highlight a fast-growing problem: as wildfires scorch ever-larger parts of Canada and force thousands to evacuate, they are fueling the spread of right-wing disinformation and climate conspiracy theories.

"We know that events that are associated with climate impacts, especially crises or emergencies, attract a lot of attention and engagement," said Chris Russil, a professor at Carleton University who studies climate disinformation in a June interview with Canada's National Observer. "Anti-climate actors are keen to show up to contest the congealing of climate concern that tends to happen around events like this – particularly wildfire."

That was evident during last year's record-breaking wildfire season, according to a recent report co-authored by Russil. The study analyzed Twitter/X posts about the wildfires throughout 2023 to determine which posts gained the most traction and when.

The researchers found that social media lubricates the spread of false and misleading information in times of crisis. But the effects persist beyond hindering evacuation efforts and emergency response; disinformation about the wildfires also helped fuel opposition to climate policies.

Among the most prominent – and troublesome – themes to emerge in these social media ecosystems is the conspiracy theory that the wildfires were lit by "eco-terrorists, left extremists and governments … to advance a climate agenda," the report notes.

This narrative of "climate authoritarianism" was often amplified by people or accounts that had been anti-lockdown crusaders during the pandemic, Russill said.

"You see a real blurring of pandemic emergency and climate emergency as overstated, fabricated or false, and used as a pretext to get people to sign on for policies that would extend state control," he explained in June. "Given that the pandemic has receded, the influencers and politicians that built their reputations and networks through anti-public-health content are starting to bring climate into those narratives to hold interaction and engagement."

Nor are authoritarian conspiracies the only type of misinformation to be fueled by Canada's wildfires. For months, Canada's largest logging lobby group – the Forest Products Association of Canada – has for months led a massive campaign to convince Canadians logging is a solution to wildfires and climate change.

The so-called "Forestry for the Future'' campaign has spent thousands on Facebook and Instagram ads in recent months. It has also created videos and podcasts, placed large-scale ads in public spaces, paid for op-eds and articles in major news outlets and partnered with TikTok and Instagram influencers, according to a June presentation from FPAC president and CEO Derek Nighbor to the Maritime Lumber Bureau.

One of the group's key messages is that logging can help prevent catastrophic wildfires. But while critics say logging can be part of the solution to reduce the intensity and danger of wildfires, they emphasize that industry cannot be leading the charge, according to an April article by Stephen Labbé.

Elements of this narrative have emerged in the social media surrounding the Jasper fires — for instance, a post by the Cedar Trees Environment Association, a U.S.-based foundation that funds health and environmental initiatives, which claims that "the radical left is going to blame climate change while ignoring forest mismanagement in our National Park."

Other X/Twitter users, like fire ecologist Evan Frost, have fought back, pointing out that the Jasper fire will generate "lots of accusations that lack of forest [management and] beetle-killed trees are the cause of this fire behavior. Not so. These forests burn infrequently but when they do it's under drought/severe fire weather, just as is happening now," he wrote.

Despite rainfall Wednesday night, Jasper officials say Jasper is not yet safe from the flames. Still, even when they die down the disaster's online firestorm appears poised to continue.

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