Canadian fire crews battled on Thursday to prevent wildfires from reaching the northern city of Yellowknife, where all 20,000 residents are leaving by car and plane after an evacuation order was declared.
Water bombers flew low over Yellowknife as thick smoke blanketed the capital of the vast and sparsely populated Northwest Territories.
Officials say the fire, 16 kilometres north east of the city, could reach the outskirts by Saturday if there is no rain.
"Very tough days ahead - with two days of northwest to west-northwest winds on Friday and Saturday, which would push fire towards Yellowknife," the territorial fire service said in a statement on Facebook.
Hundreds of people lined up outside a local high school waiting to be transferred to the airport for one of the five evacuation flights planned on Thursday to the neighbouring province of Alberta.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau plans to convene a meeting of the Incident Response Group to discuss the fires later on Thursday, his office said. The group is comprised of senior officials and ministers and meets in cases of crisis.
This is Canada's worst-ever wildfire season with more than 1000 active fires burning across the country, including 265 in the Northwest Territories. Experts say climate change has exacerbated the wildfire problem.
Shane Thompson, the territorial environment minister, said the evacuation order had been issued late Wednesday to give people time to get out before the weather turned bad.
"The urgency is, fire changes drastically ... the conditions are in our favour right now but that will change on Saturday. We're going to see winds change which are going to have an impact," he told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp (CBC).
In total, about 65 percent of the Territories' population of 46,000 people would be evacuated, he said.
The Northwest Territories have limited infrastructure and there is only one two-lane road out of Yellowknife to the province of Alberta to the south.
Alberta has set up three official evacuee reception centres for those leaving by road but the closest is more than 1100 km from Yellowknife.
The deadline for residents to leave Yellowknife is noon local time on Friday (6am Saturday NZT).
Yellowknife mayor Rebecca Alty said special teams were clear cutting trees close to the city in a bid to prevent flames from spreading. They also planned to use fire retardant while ensuring sprinkler systems are working, she told the CBC.
"But a big, big focus is still on the fire breaks to slow the progress of the fire," she said.
Canada's two largest carriers said they were adding flights from Yellowknife and capping fares following outrage on social media about some soaring prices.
Some of the evacuees will be flown to Calgary, in Alberta. Iain Bushell, Calgary's emergency management director, said the city could accommodate and feed 5000 people.
"We are prepared to house them and help them for as long as they need," he told a televised briefing.
So far about 134,000 sq km of land in Canada have been scorched, more than six times a 10-year average.
Nearly 200,000 people have been forced to evacuate at some point this season. In a social media post, the Northwest Territories fire service said a fire that had been threatening Hay River, a community of some 3000 further south on Great Slave Lake, had stalled overnight.
"The territories have never seen anything like this before in terms of wildfire ... it's an unimaginable situation for so many," Mike Westwick, the territories' fire information officer, told the CBC.
The blazes have also affected industrial and energy production. Diamond producer De Beers said in a statement that its Gahcho Kue mine, some 280km northeast of Yellowknife, continued to operate although a number of employees from the surrounding communities had been evacuated.
In May 2016, a huge fire destroyed 10 percent of structures in the northern energy-producing Alberta city of Fort McMurray, forcing the evacuation of 90,000 residents and shut in more than a million barrels per day of oil output.
In June 2021, 90 percent of the structures in the British Columbia village of Lytton burned down, a day after it recorded Canada's hottest-ever temperature.
- Reuters