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{"text":[[{"start":13.19,"text":"“Zombie fires” smouldering under the snowpack in Canada since last winter have ignited as the weather heats up, contributing to an intense start to the wildfire season in large parts of Canada, scientists and fire experts say. "}],[{"start":28.729999999999997,"text":"Scientists are studying the rise of the phenomenon, also known as overwinter or holdover fires, where the soil catches alight during summer and burns extremely slowly underground during the subsequent winter."}],[{"start":43.78,"text":"The rich organic peat and moss that is common in the boreal region helps keep the flameless blaze alive even under layers of snow. The snowpack instead insulated the fire, said Thomas Theurer, research fellow and a fire expert at the University of Aberdeen."}],[{"start":63.61,"text":"“As conditions return to warm and dry conditions of the summer, that burning will continue to propagate and then reach the surface again, potentially re-emerging as a flaming wildfire,” he said."}],[{"start":78.45,"text":"Fires that spread underground are harder to fight, because they are more difficult to detect and access."}],[{"start":85.84,"text":"The British Columbia Wildfire Service said by midweek there were 49 active wildfires in the province which had overwintered from the 2024 fire season, all located in the northeastern region near Fort Nelson."}],[{"start":101.23,"text":"“Holdover fires in northern British Columbia are one of many factors contributing to the current fire situation in the province — if weather conditions were cooler and wetter, they would not be able to become active again,” said Jen Baron, a fire ecologist at the University of British Columbia."}],[{"start":null,"text":""}],[{"start":121.21000000000001,"text":"Evacuation orders were issued for areas of BC this week, while Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario are also experiencing blazes fuelled by a lack of rain and warmer temperatures."}],[{"start":136.31,"text":"Smoke from the fires reached as far as Europe and the US, spreading from New York to the Gulf coast. Europe’s earth monitoring service Copernicus said additional plumes are expected in coming days. "}],[{"start":150.39000000000001,"text":"It was the backdrop to a first ministers’ meeting held in Saskatoon by Canadian prime minister Mark Carney earlier in the week, where he acknowledged the firefighters and evacuees. About 5 per cent of Canada’s crude output was also threatened as key production sites in Alberta’s oil sands region closed."}],[{"start":null,"text":"Climate Capital

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