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Canada wildfire smoke blankets US Midwest and Northeast with hazardous orange haze

Canada wildfire smoke blankets US Midwest and Northeast with hazardous orange haze
Canada wildfire smoke blankets US Midwest and Northeast with hazardous orange haze

On Thursday, heavy smoke from hundreds of Canadian wildfires covered a large swath in the U.S., from the Midwest up to the Northeast. Officials warned residents to stay inside as much as possible, and avoid the unhealthy, acrid air.

Detroit had the worst air pollution in the world according to IQAir. The company monitors the city's air quality. It registered a pollutionindex (or pollution index) of 600. This is twice the level that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers "hazardous".

Data from the federal government showed that smoke levels were dangerous in Minnesota, Michigan and northern Illinois. They also reached northern Ohio, and even into Ontario. Ten states, from Minnesota all the way down to Maryland, reported "unhealthy readings" in at least some places.

Stephaine Villanova (33), a Chicago resident, was out on a stroll downtown with her father, aged 68, when she said, "It is wild, because you can't tell it from the outside. It looks like fog and you're completely covered in smoke. Both wore face masks.

Emily Fischer, professor and atmospheric chemist at Colorado State University, said: "It is a river-like flow of smoke that's currently pouring into the Midwest." This is directly related to climate change. It is the climate change that people can breathe.

Smoke was expected to?intensify throughout the day. The smoke was expected to worsen throughout the day.

The dangerous conditions in New YorkCitymetropolitan were reported just days before Sunday's FIFA World Cup final, which was to be played nearby in New Jersey in front of more than 80,000 soccer fans.

At a meeting on Thursday, New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani stated that "today is expected be the worst day for this event". At 'unhealthy levels', everyone, including people with heart disease, asthma, and older adults, may experience health effects. "Every New Yorker must take precautions today."

The mayor announced that the city would be giving away?free face masks KN95 at?hundreds? of libraries, precincts, and firehouses.

Officials reported 858 fires in Canada as of Thursday morning. Among them, 111 were considered to be out of control. The majority of fires are located in central Canada, specifically Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Ontario.

According to data from the government, 5.9 million acres (2.4 million hectares), or roughly 5,9 million acres of land, have been burned in Canada during this "wildfire season". According to climate experts, rising temperatures around the globe are fueling an increase in wildfires.

Wildfire smoke is more toxic than regular air pollution because it can linger in the atmosphere for weeks, and travel thousands of miles. Studies have shown that wildfire smoke is linked to higher rates of heart attacks and strokes. It has also been associated with cancer, pregnancy complications, and weakened immunity defenses. Reporting by Joseph Ax, Eric Cox, Caroline Stauffer, Wa Lone and Andrew Hay from New Mexico; Additional reporting by Andrew Hay and Steve Gorman in Toronto and New Mexico; Writing and editing by Mark Porter and Nick Zieminski.

(source: Reuters)