Monday, May 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Number of active wildfires in B.C. jumps to 120, with half started in last 24 hours

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Aug, 2025 10:19 AM
  • Number of active wildfires in B.C. jumps to 120, with half started in last 24 hours

The number of active wildfires in British Columbia continues to spike after high temperatures and lightning strikes this week, with about 120 blazes burning in the province.

The BC Wildfire Service said Friday that half of the fires had been started since late Wednesday as lightning storms swept across the province. 

The wildfire service says the Cariboo Fire region in central B.C. saw more than 1,200 lightning strikes Wednesday, which started 13 new fires in the area.

A wildfire south of Lytton, B.C., has been measured at just over 12-square kilometres in size and an evacuation order for Lytton First Nation remains in place because of the blaze. 

The wildfire service says the fire is highly visible from Highway 1, and motorists are asked to use extra caution and be aware of the surroundings while passing through.

Evacuation orders also remain in place for homes near Peachland in the Okanagan and near Cameron Lake on Vancouver Island.

However, the Central Okanagan Emergency Operations says in an update that crews are assessing the conditions around the Drought Hill wildfire near Peachland and they appear "favourable" enough that evacuation orders for the remaining 118 homes could be lifted Friday. 

On Wednesday, police and fire crews went door-to-door to rush residents out from 400 properties threatened by the fast-moving wildfire. 

The wildfire service says heat warnings have ended for much of the province and there's a small chance of isolated showers, but dry conditions mean fuel on the ground remains ripe for ignition.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Freeland announces plan to cap grocery profits, expand competition

Freeland announces plan to cap grocery profits, expand competition
Liberal leadership candidate Chrystia Freeland has pitched a plan to lower food prices, tackling a key part of the cost-of-living issue that plagued her for much of her time as minister of finance. Her affordability plan includes a promise to cap profit margins for grocers on essential items, including eggs, milk, vegetables and baby formula.

Freeland announces plan to cap grocery profits, expand competition

'Wouldn't even hurt a fly': Memorial grows for B.C. teen shot dead by police

'Wouldn't even hurt a fly': Memorial grows for B.C. teen shot dead by police
A memorial of flowers, stuffed animals, condolence cards and cans of Orange Crush is growing for a 15-year-old Surrey, B.C., boy who died in a police shooting on Sunday. Friends, family members and strangers, many of them crying, have stopped at the memorial not far from the site where the Surrey high school student was killed. 

'Wouldn't even hurt a fly': Memorial grows for B.C. teen shot dead by police

B.C. snowpack at 72% of normal as of Feb. 1 after 'extremely dry' January

B.C. snowpack at 72% of normal as of Feb. 1 after 'extremely dry' January
British Columbia's latest snow and water supply bulletin says it was "extremely dry" across much of the province last month, with average snowpack measuring 28 per cent below normal as of Feb. 1. The latest snow pack figures released Tuesday come after the province started the year with a snowpack at 13 per cent below normal. 

B.C. snowpack at 72% of normal as of Feb. 1 after 'extremely dry' January

Former prime ministers call on Canadians to 'show the flag' as Trump pushes trade war

Former prime ministers call on Canadians to 'show the flag' as Trump pushes trade war
All of Canada's living former prime minister's are calling on Canadians to express their national pride and "show the flag" as U.S. President Donald Trump continues his threats against this country's economic security and sovereignty. Saturday, Feb. 15 — Flag Day — marks the 60th anniversary of the Canadian flag.

Former prime ministers call on Canadians to 'show the flag' as Trump pushes trade war

White House says 25 per cent steel tariffs would stack on others, as premiers in DC

White House says 25 per cent steel tariffs would stack on others, as premiers in DC
The news comes as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau cautioned U.S. Vice-President JD Vance against Trump's promised steel and aluminum levies, while Canadian premiers picked up the Team Canada mantle in Washington to push against Trump's tariff threats.

White House says 25 per cent steel tariffs would stack on others, as premiers in DC

'Get the message to President Trump': Premiers in D.C. deliver anti-tariff message

'Get the message to President Trump': Premiers in D.C. deliver anti-tariff message
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau cautioned U.S. Vice-President JD Vance against steel and aluminum levies Tuesday, as Canadian premiers picked up the Team Canada mantle in Washington to push against U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff threats. Trudeau and Vance are in Paris for a global summit on artificial intelligence.

'Get the message to President Trump': Premiers in D.C. deliver anti-tariff message