Thousands Evacuated in 3 Provinces as Canadian Wildfires Threaten Air Quality Into Some US States

Smoke rises from the Nopiming Provincial Park wildfire EA061 east of Bird River, Manitoba, Canada May 29, 2025. (Manitoba Government/Handout via Reuters)
Smoke rises from the Nopiming Provincial Park wildfire EA061 east of Bird River, Manitoba, Canada May 29, 2025. (Manitoba Government/Handout via Reuters)
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Thousands Evacuated in 3 Provinces as Canadian Wildfires Threaten Air Quality Into Some US States

Smoke rises from the Nopiming Provincial Park wildfire EA061 east of Bird River, Manitoba, Canada May 29, 2025. (Manitoba Government/Handout via Reuters)
Smoke rises from the Nopiming Provincial Park wildfire EA061 east of Bird River, Manitoba, Canada May 29, 2025. (Manitoba Government/Handout via Reuters)

More than 25,000 residents in three provinces have been evacuated as dozens of wildfires remained active Sunday and diminished air quality in parts of Canada and the US, according to officials.

Most of the evacuated residents were from Manitoba, which declared a state of emergency last week. About 17,000 people there were evacuated by Saturday along with 1,300 in Alberta. About 8,000 people in Saskatchewan had been relocated as leaders there warned the number could climb.

Smoke was worsening air quality and reducing visibility in Canada and into some US states along the border.

“Air quality and visibility due to wildfire smoke can fluctuate over short distances and can vary considerably from hour to hour,” Saskatchewan’s Public Safety Agency warned Sunday. “As smoke levels increase, health risks increase.”

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said ongoing hot, dry weather is allowing some fires to grow and threaten communities, and resources to fight the fires and support the evacuees are stretched thin.

“The next four to seven days are absolutely critical until we can find our way to changing weather patterns, and ultimately a soaking rain throughout the north,” Moe said at a Saturday news conference.

In Manitoba, more than 5,000 of those evacuated are from Flin Flon, located nearly 645 kilometers (400 miles) northwest of the provincial capital of Winnipeg. In northern Manitoba, fire knocked out power to the community of Cranberry Portage, forcing a mandatory evacuation order Saturday for about 600 residents.

The fire menacing Flin Flon began a week ago near Creighton, Saskatchewan, and quickly jumped the boundary into Manitoba. Crews have struggled to contain it. Water bombers have been intermittently grounded due to heavy smoke and a drone incursion.

The US Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service deployed an air tanker to Alberta and said it would send 150 firefighters and equipment to Canada.

In some parts of the US, air quality reached “unhealthy” levels Sunday in North Dakota and small swaths of Montana, Minnesota and South Dakota, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency’s AirNow page.

“We should expect at least a couple more rounds of Canadian smoke to come through the US over the next week,” said Bryan Jackson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in the US.

Separately, a fire in the US border state of Idaho burned at least 100 acres (40 hectares) as of Sunday, prompting road closures and some evacuations, according to the Idaho Department of Lands. The agency said in a news release that at least one structure was burned, but did not provide additional details about the damage.

Strong gusty winds of 15 to 20 mph (24 to 32 kph) and steep terrain were making it difficult for firefighters battling the fire, which ignited Saturday.

Evacuation centers have opened across Manitoba for those fleeing the fires, one as far south as Winkler, 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the US border. Winnipeg opened up public buildings for evacuees as it deals with hotels already crammed with other fire refugees, vacationers, business people and convention-goers.

Manitoba’s Indigenous leaders said Saturday at a news conference that hotel rooms in the cities where evacuees are arriving are full, and they called on the government to direct hotel owners to give evacuees priority.

Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand Chief Kyra Wilson said it was one of the largest evacuations in the province since the 1990s.

“It’s really sad to see our children having to sleep on floors. People are sitting, waiting in hallways, waiting outside, and right now we just need people to come together. People are tired,” Wilson said at a news conference.

Canada’s wildfire season runs from May through September. Its worst-ever wildfire season was in 2023. It choked much of North America with dangerous smoke for months.



Macron Reappears Wearing Viral Aviator Sunglasses

France's President Emmanuel Macron looks on during a welcoming ceremony for Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida (not pictured) in the courtyard of the Hotel des Invalides in Paris on June 29, 2026, as part of an official state visit of the Thai King to France. (AFP)
France's President Emmanuel Macron looks on during a welcoming ceremony for Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida (not pictured) in the courtyard of the Hotel des Invalides in Paris on June 29, 2026, as part of an official state visit of the Thai King to France. (AFP)
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Macron Reappears Wearing Viral Aviator Sunglasses

France's President Emmanuel Macron looks on during a welcoming ceremony for Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida (not pictured) in the courtyard of the Hotel des Invalides in Paris on June 29, 2026, as part of an official state visit of the Thai King to France. (AFP)
France's President Emmanuel Macron looks on during a welcoming ceremony for Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida (not pictured) in the courtyard of the Hotel des Invalides in Paris on June 29, 2026, as part of an official state visit of the Thai King to France. (AFP)

French President Emmanuel Macron reappeared on Monday wearing now-iconic aviator sunglasses that caused a stir at the Davos forum when he wore them due to an eye condition during a speech standing up to Donald Trump.

Macron was sporting the blue-tinted shades on the steps of the Elysee Palace as he welcomed the Sultan of Oman, Haitham bin Tariq.

But his eyewear choice wasn't to block the midday sun in Paris, but again because of "an eye problem", staff said, without giving further details.

The president continued to wear his sunglasses during a signing ceremony inside the presidential palace alongside the sultan, and later at a hotel for a Franco-Omani business forum.

Macron's aviators sparked a viral moment when he wore them at the World Economic Forum in Davos in January during a speech standing up to Donald Trump that was punctuated by the English phrase "for sure".

He said Europe needed to stand up to "bullies" and be "much stronger and more autonomous" at a time when tensions were mounting over Trump's designs on Greenland.

Macron embodied the counter-offensive against the US president, symbolized -- albeit unwittingly -- by his sunglasses.

Trump himself fueled the buzz by poking fun at Macron for wearing the aviators, quipping, "I watched him sort of be tough" with those "beautiful sunglasses".

After Davos, demand for the Henry Jullien sunglasses crashed the French eyewear maker's site.

Outgoing UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer jumped on the aviators bandwagon with a mock "Top Gun" poster featuring himself and Macron dressed as fighter pilots.

The French leader -- who speaks excellent if accented English -- quickly shot back, "For sure."


Three Firefighters Die as Blazes Torch Western US

A helicopter drops water on the Cottonwood Fire burning near Beaver, Utah, on Saturday, June 27, 2026. (AP)
A helicopter drops water on the Cottonwood Fire burning near Beaver, Utah, on Saturday, June 27, 2026. (AP)
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Three Firefighters Die as Blazes Torch Western US

A helicopter drops water on the Cottonwood Fire burning near Beaver, Utah, on Saturday, June 27, 2026. (AP)
A helicopter drops water on the Cottonwood Fire burning near Beaver, Utah, on Saturday, June 27, 2026. (AP)

Three firefighters have died battling fierce blazes along the Utah-Colorado border, driven by high temperatures, strong winds and low humidity.

Dangerous weather conditions are compounding a fire season made worse by historically low snowpack, with more than a dozen blazes burning across hundreds of thousands of acres in the two states.

Five firefighters were trapped in a fire over the weekend, with three losing their lives and two others treated for burn injuries, the US Wildland Fire Service said in a statement.

"Wildfire conditions remain critical for the Southwest and portions of the Great Basin through Monday," the National Weather Service said in an update.

Utah Governor Spencer J. Cox announced a ban on fireworks during the upcoming July 4 Independence Day holiday, while Colorado Governor Jared Polis declared a state of emergency to support fire response efforts.

Human-caused climate change is driving longer fire seasons and more intense blazes, as rising temperatures and increasingly arid conditions create landscapes primed to burn.


Europe’s Deadly Heatwave Scorches Eastern Flank, Takes Aim at Ukraine

People cool themselves with water sprayed from a special sprayer set up on a sidewalk during a hot day in Lviv, Western Ukraine, 29 June 2026. (EPA)
People cool themselves with water sprayed from a special sprayer set up on a sidewalk during a hot day in Lviv, Western Ukraine, 29 June 2026. (EPA)
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Europe’s Deadly Heatwave Scorches Eastern Flank, Takes Aim at Ukraine

People cool themselves with water sprayed from a special sprayer set up on a sidewalk during a hot day in Lviv, Western Ukraine, 29 June 2026. (EPA)
People cool themselves with water sprayed from a special sprayer set up on a sidewalk during a hot day in Lviv, Western Ukraine, 29 June 2026. (EPA)

The most severe heatwave ever recorded in Europe roasted central and eastern parts of the continent on Monday as Ukraine's war-ravaged power grid struggled to cope with the shock of scorching heat.

The heatwave first smothered western Europe last week, sending temperatures to record highs and straining hospitals, transport networks and power grids on a continent where infrastructure was not built to withstand punishing heat and where air conditioning is not widespread.

More than 1,300 excess deaths were recorded in Europe since June 21, according to the UN health agency, including several small children who died in locked cars and youths who drowned as they sought relief from the infernal temperatures in unsupervised swimming spots.

France reported at least 74 drowning deaths since June 18 and Poland said 17 drowned on Sunday alone.

"I'm doing the same thing as everyone -- trying to stay in the shade and drink a lot of water," Susanne, a Vienna resident, told AFP on a bank of a river near the Austrian capital.

"I just hope that the politicians will understand the situation and will begin to set a course in the right direction," she said.

On Monday, the Balkans braced for temperatures of up to 40C, with firefighters in Bosnia battling blazes sparked during the heat.

At least 130 million people in Europe were expected to swelter through temperatures of more than 35C, down from 190 million on Sunday according to an AFP analysis.

This heatwave is the most severe ever recorded in Europe, and would have been "virtually impossible" this early in the summer without climate change, the World Weather Attribution group of scientists said.

All-time temperature records have been broken in Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic, as well as for the month of June in the UK and in Switzerland.

- New shock for Ukraine -

Ukraine's energy network, already pummeled by Russian attacks over more than four years of war, was buckling under the high temperatures on Monday.

In the western Rivne region, authorities introduced emergency power outages to ease pressure on the grid as temperatures passed 36C as of 15:00 (1200 GMT), according to data from the state Hydrometeorological Centre.

The central Khmelnytsky region also announced temporary outages, and five other regions -- from Ivano-Frankivsk in the west to Zaporizhzhia on the front line in the south -- warned households and businesses to be prepared for blackouts on Tuesday.

The state weather service said the country would face "intense heat", with temperatures of 35C-38C expected, though this is some way off the national record of 42C recorded in August 2010.

"The heat is also a serious test for equipment that has been operating under wartime conditions for more than four years and has withstood numerous attacks," Sergii Kovalenko, CEO of the Yasno energy company said over the weekend.

He said that summer was the peak period for repairing the energy network, battered through the winter by repeat Russian attacks, meaning the grid was already "operating at the limit of its capabilities".

- Record temperatures -

Over the weekend, the heat scorched the Czech Republic, Germany and Poland, with the countries setting new temperature records of 41.9C, 41.7C and 40.5C, respectively.

The Berlin police used water cannons to help residents of the capital cool off for a second day running Sunday -- this time at the Olympia venue where singer Bruno Mars was performing.

With temperatures cooling in France, the national weather service said on Sunday evening it was already anticipating the possibility of another heatwave in July.

The scorching heat has sparked lively discussion in some countries about the merits of air-conditioning, which is used far less in Europe than in some parts of the world.

The EU on Monday refused to be drawn into the increasingly politicized debate, with a Brussels spokeswoman saying the bloc did not have "a particular view or position" on the matter.