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Wildfire update

Wildfires of note - June 14, 2025

Wildfires of note

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Red Earth East Complex

The Red Earth East complex is made up of numerous wildfires centered in the northeastern portion of the Slave Lake Forest Area. Some of the wildfires in the complex include:

SWF100 and SWF092 continue to be the most active wildfires in this complex. 

  • SWF092 near Red Earth Creek and Loon Lake First Nation is classified as out of control and currently 77,458 ha;
  • SWF100 on the west side of Peerless Lake, along Highway 686 is classified as out of control and is currently 16,397 ha.

Red Earth East Complex - Evacuation orders, The following communities remain under and evacuation order:

  • Chipewyan Lake;
  • Peerless and Trout Lake;
  • Red Earth Creek; and
  • Loon River First Nation.

Cooler conditions and rain are limiting wildfire behavior, allowing good progress to be made on this wildfire complex today. Crews are working on reinforcing containment lines. Heavy equipment, helicopters, airtankers, and firefighters continue to reinforce and build containment lines. 

Kiskatinaw River Wildfire - near Kelly Lake, B.C. (GBZ001)

Alberta Wildfire, the BC Wildfire Service, and the County of Grande Prairie continue operating under unified command to coordinate efforts in containing the Kiskatinaw River wildfire (GBZ001/G70422) which remains classified as out of control. This unified command is also working closely with the Peace River Regional District to ensure a coordinated regional response. The fire is estimated to be 26,627 hectares in size.

Fire behaviour continues to be low on this wildfire due to the rain it received and lower temperatures expected today. More rain is expected in the coming days.

Firefighting crews are working on strengthening containment lines, supported by aircraft. Heavy equipment continues working on building fireguards on the northeast side of the fire. These operations are essential for creating tight, secure containment lines that prevent further spread. 

Slims Creek (PWF050) 

PWF050 is 30 km north of the town of Manning. Cooler temperatures and rainy conditions have slowed fire growth today, and the fire is not expected to make any significant advances towards infrastructure or communities. Work continues to contain the wildfire with heavy equipment, helicopters and firefighter crews. 

Highway 35 is open between Hawk Hills and Keg River with speed reductions in place due to decreased visibility with smoke conditions. 

Twin Lakes Provincial Recreation Area is in the vicinity of this fire and also remains closed at this time. 

Blue Sky Wildfire (SWF088)

The Blue Sky wildfire (SWF088) is located 22 km north of Marten Beach. It is classified as out of control and is estimated to be 13,684 hectares. This wildfire received about 14 mm of rain in the in last 24 hours with more expected today. Firefighters are being supported by airtankers and helicopters conducting bucket operations along the wildfire, working on containment and limiting further spread. Highway 88 is currently open, however smoke in the area may reduce visibility. Visit 511 Alberta for the most up to date information on road conditions.

Tulip Lake (MWF026)

This wildfire is currently classified as out of control and is estimated at approximately 14,099 ha. It is burning 15 km northeast of Fort Fitzgerald and 28 km east of Fort Smith. This wildfire had minimal growth yesterday due to favorable weather conditions. 

Fire behaviour could increase today as temperatures continue to climb in this area. Firefighters, supported by aircraft, are focusing their efforts on the west, north and south sides of the wildfire to secure the perimeter.  

Sousa Creek (HWF036)

HWF036 is approximately 5 km south of the community of Chateh, 72 km west of the Town of High Level, and 27 km east of the Town of Rainbow Lake. This wildfire is estimated at 44,551 ha in size. 

Firefighters are continuing their work along and within the perimeter, focusing on the north and northeast sides to secure and re-enforce the containment lines. They are working alongside heavy equipment and helicopters with water buckets. Night vision helicopters worked on this wildfire last night.

Caribou Lake (LWF090)

Caribou Lake Wildfire (LWF090) is currently burning out of control and is an estimated 69,301 ha in size.

Showers are continuing today which has reduced the fire behaviour in this wildfire. There has been no significant growth in the past 24 hours. Crews are continuing to build fireguard alongside heavy equipment. The reduced fire behavior will help firefighters gain the upper hand on this wildfire.  

Published on June 14, 2025 1:32 pm