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View Full Version : Armageddon in Alberta | 80,000 evacuate as ENTIRE city burns to the ground



Serpo
4th May 2016, 11:18 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=71&v=Ee0-7D9Q2zQ

Cebu_4_2
5th May 2016, 02:57 AM
Just called my half aunt up there in Alberta and had a shocking revolution! She told me to get the fuck out and stop drinking. Perhaps the propaganda is legal... I felt bad waking her up.

mick silver
5th May 2016, 04:55 AM
Mass Evacuation as ‘Apocalyptic’ Inferno Engulfs Canadian Tar Sands City
CommonDreams (http://commondreams.org/)) A raging wildfire in a Canadian tar sands town has forced tens of thousands of evacuations and destroyed several residential neighborhoods, offering a bleak vision of a fiery future if the fossil fuel era is not brought to an end.The blaze in Fort McMurray (http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/live-blog-fort-mcmurray-wildfire-1.3565398), Alberta, started over the weekend, doubled in size on Monday, and grew into an inferno on Tuesday. It is expected to worsen (https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2016/05/04/hot-dry-winds-threaten-to-worsen-hellish-fort-mcmurray-wildfire-today.html) on Wednesday as strong wind gusts and record high temperatures (https://weather.gc.ca/warnings/weathersummaries_e.html) persist.
“It’s apocalyptic,” John O’Connor, a family physician who has treated patients with health problems in the region related to tar sands pollution, told (http://www.nationalobserver.com/2016/05/03/news/fort-mcmurray-fire-its-apocalyptic-no-way-out-north) the National Observer.

“There was smoke everywhere and it was raining ash,” evacuee Shams Rehman said (http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/alberta/it-was-raining-ash-wildfire-sparks-mass-exodus-from-fort-mcmurray/article29850485/) to theGlobe and Mail after he and his family reached an evacuation center in the resort town of Lac La Biche, Alberta. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”
Brian Jean, the leader of Alberta’s opposition party and a resident of the city, said (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/may/03/wildfire-alberta-canada-fort-mcmurray-evacuation) much of downtown Fort McMurray was going up in flames: “My home of the last 10 years and the home I had for 15 years before that are both destroyed.”

According to (http://edmontonjournal.com/news/local-news/first-damage-assessment-says-80-per-cent-of-homes-destroyed-in-beacon-hill-in-fort-mcmurray) the Edmonton Journal:

Officials estimate 17,000 citizens fled north to industry sites. Another 35,000 headed south, including 18,000 people enroute to Edmonton.
Traffic was bumper-to-bumper as people packed families and pets into cars, trucks and campers. Line-ups snaked around gas stations and late in the evening, RCMP were advising they would travel the highway with gas to assist stranded motorists. Wednesday morning, the Alberta government took to social media to say that it would be escorting a fuel tanker along Highway 63 to help people who were still waiting for gas.
No casualties have been reported.
Fire season came early to Western Canada this year; already there have been 311 fires in Alberta (http://wildfire.alberta.ca/reports/sitrep.html), according to the province’s Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, and approximately 192 fires (http://bcwildfire.ca/hprScripts/WildfireNews/Statistics.asp) in British Columbia.
Experts attribute the early onset and extremity of the fires to human-caused climate change, exacerbated by a strong El Niņo effect, which led to a drier and warmer winter with lower-than-average snowfall.

“Because spring came about a month early here, we are already in the middle of our prime fire season for the spring,” Mike Flannigan, a wildfire expert (https://www.ualberta.ca/~flanniga/climatechange.html) at the University of Alberta,told (http://globalnews.ca/news/2675281/western-canada-wildfires-this-year-could-be-worse-than-last-say-experts/) Global News. “Given the already dry conditions means it’s easier for fires, once they sustain themselves, to go underground until it gets windy and they re-appear.”
Furthermore, University of Lethbridge professor Judith Kulig told the publication, “the whole aspect of climate change and global warming…is then interrelated [to] things such as insect infestation, so pine beetle increases because it’s not a cold enough winter. The trees are infested and drier and more prone to fire.”
At Climate Central on Wednesday, senior science writer Brian Kahn put it succinctly (http://www.climatecentral.org/news/climate-context-fort-mcmurray-wildfire-20311):

The wildfire is the latest in a lengthening (http://www.climatecentral.org/news/nw-fires-weather-climate-change-boreal-forests-17778) lineage (https://www.climatecentral.org/blogs/sunburn-in-siberia-heat-wave-leads-to-wildfires-16313) of early (http://www.climatecentral.org/news/climate-change-alaska-wildfires-19181) wildfires (http://www.climatecentral.org/news/alaska-entering-new-era-for-wildfires-19146) in the northern reaches of the globe that are indicative of a changing climate (http://www.climatecentral.org/news/arctics-boreal-forests-burning-at-unprecedented-rate-16278). As the planet continues to warm, these types of fires will likely only become more common and intense as spring snowpack disappears and temperatures warm.
Fort McMurray is home to the Athabasca tar sands, the largest single oil deposit in the world, containing an estimated 174 trillion barrels of bitumen. Tar sands oil production is the fastest growing source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in Canada, and greatly increases the country’s contribution to global warming.
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Twisted Titan
5th May 2016, 05:44 AM
Experts attribute the early onset and extremity of the fires to human-caused climate change, exacerbated by a strong El Niņo effect, which led to a drier and warmer winter with lower-than-average snowfall.



It couldn't be that developers build homes and cities in areas that server as natural fire breaks and stop nature from doing what it always does.

Nah couldn't be that

Serpo
8th May 2016, 11:14 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCtw-A_zwh4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fq0Eyb5gHkg

Glass
9th May 2016, 12:06 AM
wasn't the alberta fire deliberately lit by a firefighter?

17 suspicious fired in 6 days.

Doesn't mention culprit. I certainly read it somewhere.


A massive fire in Canada has engulfed the CN Rail trestle bridge in the community of Mayerthorpe, Alberta. An investigation is underway as this is the 17th suspicious fire in the last six days.
https://img.rt.com/files/2016.04/original/57206a96c4618822748b459b.jpg

According to police, the fire, which destroyed the bridge some 120km northwest of Edmonton, southern Canada, could have been set deliberately.
"It is suspicious in nature,” fire chief Randy Schroeder told CBC. "There were some witnesses that indicated people were in the area at the time of the fire."
The area has seen no fewer than 17 fires in the last six days, and the police are now vigorously investigating each incident.
The following video shows the wooden bridge being completely incinerated by the flames, with black smoke billowing up into the sky.



RT Story (https://www.rt.com/news/341084-canada-bridge-fire-rail/).


Don't know if this is confirmed.

Monday, May 2, 2016, 9:12 AM - After a CN trestle bridge went up in flames in the Alberta town of Mayerthorpe (tcm:12-66989) in a case of suspected arson, authorities have announced an arrest -- and the suspect is not only a firefighter, but also the son of the town's former mayor.

Weather Network (http://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/arsonist-in-mayerthorpe-bridge-fire-arrested/67206)