In
Canada’s Wilds, a Chilling Inferno Was Also an Omen
In “Fire
Weather,” the journalist John Vaillant makes the case that the catastrophic —
and inevitable — 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire was a sign of things to come.
As John
Vaillant explains, the conditions at Fort McMurray were particularly
catastrophic. But far from an outlier, the conflagration was a harbinger.
David Enrich
By David Enrich
Published June 6, 2023
Updated Nov. 28, 2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/06/books/review/fire-weather-john-vaillant.html
FIRE
WEATHER: A True Story From a Hotter World, by John Vaillant
This was
one of the Book Review’s 10 best books of 2023.
“Is fire alive?” the journalist and author John Vaillant
asks early in his new book, “Fire Weather.” I rolled my eyes, even as Vaillant
ticks off a dozen lifelike characteristics — it grows, it breathes, it travels
in search of nourishment — because the answer seemed so obvious: No. Of course
not.
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Some 300 pages later, the question didn’t feel quite so
ludicrous.
Vaillant tells the story of a colossal wildfire that, in the
spring of 2016, torched much of Fort McMurray, a small city carved out of
central Canada’s boreal forest. It is a tale of firefighters, homeowners and
local authorities confronting a conflagration so intense that it generated its
own weather systems, complete with hurricane-force winds and bolts of
lightning.
More than that, it is a real-life fable about the causes and
consequences of climate change. Fort McMurray, with a population of about
90,000, was created so that energy companies could extract bitumen — a sticky
black substance that can be converted into synthetic crude oil, diesel and a
variety of other petroleum-based products — from the tar sands of northern
Alberta.
More than 40 percent of American oil imports come from Fort
McMurray. In other words, the gargantuan mining and processing operation — so
vast that it is visible from 6,000 miles above Earth’s surface — is a physical
manifestation of the forces that have led to a warming world.
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It is also a physical manifestation of the grave threats
posed by that warming world.
A few decades ago, this would have been an unlikely setting
for an out-of-control inferno, especially in the cool, damp months of spring.
But in May 2016, temperatures soared into the high 80s — almost 30 degrees
Fahrenheit above normal — and the air was as dry as a desert. The conditions,
Vaillant writes, were “as conducive to fire as is possible anywhere on Earth.”
The small fire was first spotted, in the forest southwest of
Fort McMurray, at 4 p.m. on Sunday, May 1. When it didn’t quickly sputter out,
it was given an impersonal code by firefighters: MWF-009. The little brush fire
grew exponentially, fueled by crispy trees and an unlucky wind. Even as the
burgeoning blaze rushed toward the city, authorities were slow to grasp the
magnitude of the danger. Before it was over, locals would rechristen 009 “the
Beast.”
To describe what happened next, Vaillant takes full
advantage of resources that previous generations of journalists could only have
dreamed of: cellphone cameras, dashboard cameras, security cameras, even
stuffed animals with nanny cameras nestled inside. Countless people posted
thousands of photos and videos to social media, and the digital trove, as well
as interviews with witnesses, enables Vaillant to vividly describe the fire as
it devoured Fort McMurray.
There was the instant that a clear blue sky was obliterated
by “a towering black cloud shot through with streaks of orange and seething
with flames,” transforming a sunny spring day into a long, dark night. There
were the sounds of car tires, gas tanks and propane-fueled grills detonating in
awful synchrony as the fire ripped through tightly packed neighborhoods. There
was the spooky view from a nanny cam as flames tentatively lapped at a window
before incinerating the entire house.
It is a gripping yarn, though the storytelling is at times
slowed by Vaillant’s wanderings. There’s a painstaking history of the use of
bitumen over the millenniums. There’s a discourse on the quasi-spiritual nature
of fire in its many forms, which eventually meanders into a meditation on
oxygen and human breathing. There’s a lengthy rehashing of the roots of climate
science, activism and denialism.
With a few poignant exceptions — including the story of a
Fort McMurray welder named Wayne McGrath, who valiantly tries to fight off the
blaze and his own demons — “Fire Weather” lacks many memorable human
characters. But Vaillant fills that void with an unforgettable protagonist:
fire itself.
A raging wildfire is hard to fathom for anyone who has not
stood in its path. Vaillant is clearly in awe as he lovingly details 009’s
inner workings and apocalyptic fallout.
The forest surrounding Fort McMurray consisted largely of
black spruces that were dripping with flammable sap. As the tall trees ignited,
the fire inhaled oxygen from below. That spawned powerful and sustained winds
that screamed up toward the treetops and then gusted embers and sparks hundreds
of yards out from the fire, fueling its relentless growth.
In the center of the fire, a jet of fast-rising, superheated
air sucked hundreds of thousands of gallons of water — from fire hoses, broken
pipes, icy rivers — skyward. Miles overhead, the air cooled and the water vapor
turned to carbon-infused ice, and “hurricane-force downdrafts hurled fusillades
of black hail” back to the ground.
Vaillant notes that homes used to be crammed with natural
materials: wooden tables and chairs, sofas stuffed with cotton, curtains made
of lace — flammable, yes, but not compared with today’s combustible houses. Now
furniture is made of plastic or wood composites, held together with resins and
glues and coated or filled with synthetic materials like nylon and
polyurethane. “Today,” Vaillant writes, “it is common to find oneself sitting
or sleeping on furniture composed almost entirely of petroleum products.”
No wonder then that within minutes, newly built homes in
Fort McMurray were reduced to cinder.
Vaillant anthropomorphizes fire. Not only does it grow and
breathe and search for food; it strategizes. It hunts. It lays in wait for
months, even years. Vaillant even quotes someone comparing forest fires to
farmers cultivating their crops.
Fire, of course, is not alive in any technical sense. But
that doesn’t make it a less daunting antagonist. Climate change has warmed the
air and dried the soil, creating tinderbox conditions. As Vaillant notes,
“Around the world, fires are burning over longer seasons and with greater
intensity than at any other time in human history.” The catastrophe that
ravaged Fort McMurray is probably an omen of what lies ahead.
Audio produced by Kate Winslett.
David Enrich, The Times’s business investigations editor, is
the author, most recently, of “Servants of the Damned: Giant Law Firms, Donald
Trump, and the Corruption of Justice.”
David Enrich is the business investigations editor for The
Times. His coverage has focused on law and business as well as the banking
industry. He has reported on corporate law firms, the First Amendment and libel
law, and faltering banks. More about David Enrich
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