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Real Time Weather for September 1, 2025

You can also see the weather forecast for tomorrow.

Current weather

September 1, 2025 Monday

Night

current weather condition

Clear

21.3

Feels like 21.3

Pressure 1020 mb
Humidity 40%
Precipitation 0 mm

Wind Activity

Wind
Wind speed 4 kph
Wind degree 280°
Wind direction W
Wind gust 8.3 kph

Weather Conditions

Conditions
Condition Sunny
Cloud cover 0 %
Vision 24 km
Chance of rain 0%
Chance of snow 0%

Solar Activity

The UVI ranges from 0 to ≥11.

The general thought is that the higher the UVI, the higher the risk will be for the

general public to attain diseases associated with an overexposure to UV radiation.

Sun
UV Index 0

Astronomical data

Astro
Sunrise 06:25 AM
Sunset 07:58 PM
Moonrise 05:21 PM
Moonset 11:40 PM
Moon phase Waxing Gibbous
Moon illumination 57

Weather summary

Summary
t° max 30.4
t° min 17.2
t° avg 24.1
Humidity avg 46 %
Precipitation total 0 mm
Wind speed max 12.6 kph

Hourly weather forecast for for September 1, 2025

Temperature 22 ℃

Feels like 24.5 ℃

Presure 1018 mb

Humidity 49%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 22 ℃

Wind speed 4 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 254°

Wind gust 8.3 kph

Heat index 24.5 ℃

Dew point 10.8 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 21.3 ℃

Feels like 21.2 ℃

Presure 1020 mb

Humidity 40%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 21.2 ℃

Wind speed 4 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 280°

Wind gust 8.3 kph

Heat index 22.4 ℃

Dew point 10.9 ℃

Vision 24 km

UV index Low

Temperature 20.4 ℃

Feels like 20.4 ℃

Presure 1018 mb

Humidity 55%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 20.4 ℃

Wind speed 2.9 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 288°

Wind gust 6 kph

Heat index 21 ℃

Dew point 11.1 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 19.7 ℃

Feels like 19.7 ℃

Presure 1018 mb

Humidity 58%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 19.7 ℃

Wind speed 2.2 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 245°

Wind gust 4.5 kph

Heat index 20 ℃

Dew point 11.3 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 18.9 ℃

Feels like 18.9 ℃

Presure 1018 mb

Humidity 62%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 18.9 ℃

Wind speed 2.9 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 214°

Wind gust 6 kph

Heat index 19 ℃

Dew point 11.4 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 18.2 ℃

Feels like 18.2 ℃

Presure 1019 mb

Humidity 65%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 18.2 ℃

Wind speed 3.2 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 263°

Wind gust 6.8 kph

Heat index 18.3 ℃

Dew point 11.5 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 17.7 ℃

Feels like 17.7 ℃

Presure 1019 mb

Humidity 68%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 17.7 ℃

Wind speed 2.9 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 274°

Wind gust 6 kph

Heat index 17.7 ℃

Dew point 11.5 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 17.7 ℃

Feels like 17.7 ℃

Presure 1019 mb

Humidity 70%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 17.7 ℃

Wind speed 2.5 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 261°

Wind gust 4.9 kph

Heat index 17.8 ℃

Dew point 11.6 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 19 ℃

Feels like 19 ℃

Presure 1019 mb

Humidity 71%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 19 ℃

Wind speed 2.2 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 265°

Wind gust 3.3 kph

Heat index 19 ℃

Dew point 12.4 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 20.8 ℃

Feels like 20.8 ℃

Presure 1018 mb

Humidity 65%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 20.8 ℃

Wind speed 3.2 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 302°

Wind gust 3.7 kph

Heat index 21.9 ℃

Dew point 13.4 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 23.3 ℃

Feels like 24.1 ℃

Presure 1018 mb

Humidity 56%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 23.3 ℃

Wind speed 0.4 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 2°

Wind gust 0.4 kph

Heat index 24.1 ℃

Dew point 13.5 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 25.9 ℃

Feels like 26.1 ℃

Presure 1017 mb

Humidity 47%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 25.9 ℃

Wind speed 3.2 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 90°

Wind gust 4 kph

Heat index 26.1 ℃

Dew point 13.7 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 27.6 ℃

Feels like 27.4 ℃

Presure 1017 mb

Humidity 39%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 27.6 ℃

Wind speed 6.1 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 96°

Wind gust 7.8 kph

Heat index 27.4 ℃

Dew point 13.1 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 28.8 ℃

Feels like 28.1 ℃

Presure 1016 mb

Humidity 33%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 28.8 ℃

Wind speed 9 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 91°

Wind gust 11.6 kph

Heat index 28.1 ℃

Dew point 11.5 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 29.6 ℃

Feels like 28.7 ℃

Presure 1016 mb

Humidity 30%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 29.6 ℃

Wind speed 11.5 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 90°

Wind gust 15.3 kph

Heat index 28.7 ℃

Dew point 10.6 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Moderate

Temperature 30 ℃

Feels like 29 ℃

Presure 1016 mb

Humidity 29%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 30 ℃

Wind speed 12.6 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 98°

Wind gust 17.2 kph

Heat index 29 ℃

Dew point 10.6 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Moderate

Temperature 30.1 ℃

Feels like 29 ℃

Presure 1015 mb

Humidity 29%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 30.1 ℃

Wind speed 11.2 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 101°

Wind gust 16.2 kph

Heat index 29 ℃

Dew point 10.5 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Moderate

Temperature 29.9 ℃

Feels like 28.7 ℃

Presure 1015 mb

Humidity 29%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 29.9 ℃

Wind speed 9.4 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 89°

Wind gust 14.7 kph

Heat index 28.7 ℃

Dew point 10.3 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Moderate

Temperature 29.2 ℃

Feels like 28.2 ℃

Presure 1015 mb

Humidity 29%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 29.2 ℃

Wind speed 9.4 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 67°

Wind gust 16.4 kph

Heat index 28.2 ℃

Dew point 10 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Moderate

Temperature 28.6 ℃

Feels like 27.6 ℃

Presure 1015 mb

Humidity 31%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 28.6 ℃

Wind speed 7.9 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 42°

Wind gust 16.6 kph

Heat index 27.6 ℃

Dew point 10 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Moderate

Temperature 27.9 ℃

Feels like 27 ℃

Presure 1015 mb

Humidity 31%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 27.9 ℃

Wind speed 6.5 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 44°

Wind gust 13.6 kph

Heat index 27 ℃

Dew point 9.3 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 27.2 ℃

Feels like 26.5 ℃

Presure 1016 mb

Humidity 32%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 27.2 ℃

Wind speed 5.8 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 47°

Wind gust 12.1 kph

Heat index 26.5 ℃

Dew point 9.1 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 22.8 ℃

Feels like 22.4 ℃

Presure 1016 mb

Humidity 33%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 0 %

Wind chill 22.8 ℃

Wind speed 4 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 55°

Wind gust 8.3 kph

Heat index 22.4 ℃

Dew point 8.8 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Temperature 23.5 ℃

Feels like 23.7 ℃

Presure 1018 mb

Humidity 50%

Precipitation 0 mm

Cloud cover 3 %

Wind chill 23.5 ℃

Wind speed 2.5 kph

Wind direction NSW

Wind direction 80°

Wind gust 5.3 kph

Heat index 23.7 ℃

Dew point 7.7 ℃

Vision 10 km

UV index Low

Weather Alerts for , for September 1, 2025

Alerts and warnings issued by government agencies in USA, UK, Europe and Rest of the World

Total alerts - 5

Areas

Note

Service Notice – June 2025: The Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) CAP Service undergoes changes from time to time as the business of alerting evolves. For 2025, changes are expected to include... 1) ECCC's initiative to upgrade the presentation of alerts into Colour-Coded Weather Alerts is planned for deployment for later in 2025. Data changes will appear in CAP-CP upon this deployment, 2) SAME event codes for a few alert types are updated and 3) other minor improvements and corrections. For more information on these changes: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/ | Notification de service – juin 2025: Le service du PAC d’Environnement et Changement climatique Canada (ECCC) subit périodiquement des changements à mesure que le système d’alerte évolue. Pour 2025, il y aura des changements incluant... 1) l'initiative d'ECCC visant à améliorer la présentation des alertes sous forme d'alertes météorologiques codées par couleur est prévue d’être déployée plus tard en 2025. Des changements aux données apparaîtront dans le PC-PAC lors de ce déploiement, 2) des codes d’événement MSSC pour quelques types d’alerte ont été mis à jour et 3) d’autres améliorations et corrections mineures. Pour plus d’informations sur ces changements: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/

Description

The regions of BC listed are being impacted or are likely to be impacted by wildfire smoke over the next 24-48 hours. - B.C. North Peace River: includes the City of Fort St John and all communities along Hwy 97 extending from Farmington to Pink Mountain; Hwy 29 including Moberly Lake, Hudson’s Hope; also includes Rolla, Clayhurst and Goodlow. - B.C. South Peace River: includes Chetwynd, Dawson Creek, Pouce Coupe, and Tumbler Ridge. - Chilcotin: includes Hansville, Alexis Creek, Chilanko Forks, Tatla Lake, Nimpo Lake, Anahim Lake, and the southern half of Tweedsmuir Park. - Fort Nelson: includes Fort Nelson, Muskwa, Prophet River, Buckinghorse River, Sikanni Chief, and Hwy 77 north to the Yukon border. Expect local smoke close new and active fires across the province. Degraded conditions will persist in areas with local emissions. During a wildfire, smoke conditions can change quickly over short distances and can vary considerably hour-by-hour. Monitor the situation for any wildfires near your area at EmergencyInfoBC. Follow all emergency announcements relevant to your location. The next update will be available on September 01, 2025 and made available on the Province’s Air Quality Warnings webpage. ### As smoke levels increase, health risks increase. Limit time outdoors. Consider reducing or rescheduling outdoor sports, activities and events. You may experience mild and common symptoms such as eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches or a mild cough. More serious but less common symptoms include wheezing, chest pains or severe cough. If you think you are having a medical emergency, seek immediate medical assistance. People more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution, including people aged 65 and older, pregnant people, infants and young children, people with an existing illness or chronic health condition, and people who work outdoors, should reduce or reschedule strenuous activities outdoors and seek medical attention if experiencing symptoms. For more information on current air quality, visit https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/environment/air-land-water/air. Visit http://www.airhealth.ca for information on how to reduce your health risk and your personal contribution to pollution levels, as well as for current and forecast AQHI values. Please continue to monitor alerts and forecasts issued by Environment Canada.

Instruction

When indoors, keep windows and doors closed as much as possible. When there is an extreme heat event occurring with poor air quality, prioritize keeping cool. Protect your indoor air from wildfire smoke. Actions can include using a clean, good quality air filter in your ventilation system and/or a certified portable air cleaner that can filter fine particles. If you must spend time outdoors, a well-constructed, well-fitting and properly worn respirator type mask (such as a NIOSH-certified N95 or equivalent respirator) can reduce your exposure to the fine particles in the smoke. Even though exposure may be reduced, there can still be risks to health. Check in on others who are in your care or live nearby who may be more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution. Always follow guidance from local authorities. Learn more at https://www.canada.ca/wildfire-smoke.

Areas

Note

Service Notice – June 2025: The Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) CAP Service undergoes changes from time to time as the business of alerting evolves. For 2025, changes are expected to include... 1) ECCC's initiative to upgrade the presentation of alerts into Colour-Coded Weather Alerts is planned for deployment for later in 2025. Data changes will appear in CAP-CP upon this deployment, 2) SAME event codes for a few alert types are updated and 3) other minor improvements and corrections. For more information on these changes: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/ | Notification de service – juin 2025: Le service du PAC d’Environnement et Changement climatique Canada (ECCC) subit périodiquement des changements à mesure que le système d’alerte évolue. Pour 2025, il y aura des changements incluant... 1) l'initiative d'ECCC visant à améliorer la présentation des alertes sous forme d'alertes météorologiques codées par couleur est prévue d’être déployée plus tard en 2025. Des changements aux données apparaîtront dans le PC-PAC lors de ce déploiement, 2) des codes d’événement MSSC pour quelques types d’alerte ont été mis à jour et 3) d’autres améliorations et corrections mineures. Pour plus d’informations sur ces changements: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/

Description

The regions of BC listed are being impacted or are likely to be impacted by wildfire smoke over the next 24-48 hours. - B.C. North Peace River: includes the City of Fort St John and all communities along Hwy 97 extending from Farmington to Pink Mountain; Hwy 29 including Moberly Lake, Hudson’s Hope; also includes Rolla, Clayhurst and Goodlow. - B.C. South Peace River: includes Chetwynd, Dawson Creek, Pouce Coupe, and Tumbler Ridge. - Chilcotin: includes Hansville, Alexis Creek, Chilanko Forks, Tatla Lake, Nimpo Lake, Anahim Lake, and the southern half of Tweedsmuir Park. - Fort Nelson: includes Fort Nelson, Muskwa, Prophet River, Buckinghorse River, Sikanni Chief, and Hwy 77 north to the Yukon border. Expect local smoke close new and active fires across the province. Degraded conditions will persist in areas with local emissions. During a wildfire, smoke conditions can change quickly over short distances and can vary considerably hour-by-hour. Monitor the situation for any wildfires near your area at EmergencyInfoBC. Follow all emergency announcements relevant to your location. The next update will be available on September 01, 2025 and made available on the Province’s Air Quality Warnings webpage. ### As smoke levels increase, health risks increase. Limit time outdoors. Consider reducing or rescheduling outdoor sports, activities and events. You may experience mild and common symptoms such as eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches or a mild cough. More serious but less common symptoms include wheezing, chest pains or severe cough. If you think you are having a medical emergency, seek immediate medical assistance. People more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution, including people aged 65 and older, pregnant people, infants and young children, people with an existing illness or chronic health condition, and people who work outdoors, should reduce or reschedule strenuous activities outdoors and seek medical attention if experiencing symptoms. For more information on current air quality, visit https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/environment/air-land-water/air. Visit http://www.airhealth.ca for information on how to reduce your health risk and your personal contribution to pollution levels, as well as for current and forecast AQHI values. Please continue to monitor alerts and forecasts issued by Environment Canada.

Instruction

When indoors, keep windows and doors closed as much as possible. When there is an extreme heat event occurring with poor air quality, prioritize keeping cool. Protect your indoor air from wildfire smoke. Actions can include using a clean, good quality air filter in your ventilation system and/or a certified portable air cleaner that can filter fine particles. If you must spend time outdoors, a well-constructed, well-fitting and properly worn respirator type mask (such as a NIOSH-certified N95 or equivalent respirator) can reduce your exposure to the fine particles in the smoke. Even though exposure may be reduced, there can still be risks to health. Check in on others who are in your care or live nearby who may be more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution. Always follow guidance from local authorities. Learn more at https://www.canada.ca/wildfire-smoke.

Areas

Note

Service Notice – June 2025: The Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) CAP Service undergoes changes from time to time as the business of alerting evolves. For 2025, changes are expected to include... 1) ECCC's initiative to upgrade the presentation of alerts into Colour-Coded Weather Alerts is planned for deployment for later in 2025. Data changes will appear in CAP-CP upon this deployment, 2) SAME event codes for a few alert types are updated and 3) other minor improvements and corrections. For more information on these changes: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/ | Notification de service – juin 2025: Le service du PAC d’Environnement et Changement climatique Canada (ECCC) subit périodiquement des changements à mesure que le système d’alerte évolue. Pour 2025, il y aura des changements incluant... 1) l'initiative d'ECCC visant à améliorer la présentation des alertes sous forme d'alertes météorologiques codées par couleur est prévue d’être déployée plus tard en 2025. Des changements aux données apparaîtront dans le PC-PAC lors de ce déploiement, 2) des codes d’événement MSSC pour quelques types d’alerte ont été mis à jour et 3) d’autres améliorations et corrections mineures. Pour plus d’informations sur ces changements: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/

Description

The regions of BC listed are being impacted or are likely to be impacted by wildfire smoke over the next 24-48 hours. - B.C. North Peace River: includes the City of Fort St John and all communities along Hwy 97 extending from Farmington to Pink Mountain; Hwy 29 including Moberly Lake, Hudson’s Hope; also includes Rolla, Clayhurst and Goodlow. - B.C. South Peace River: includes Chetwynd, Dawson Creek, Pouce Coupe, and Tumbler Ridge. - Chilcotin: includes Hansville, Alexis Creek, Chilanko Forks, Tatla Lake, Nimpo Lake, Anahim Lake, and the southern half of Tweedsmuir Park. - Fort Nelson: includes Fort Nelson, Muskwa, Prophet River, Buckinghorse River, Sikanni Chief, and Hwy 77 north to the Yukon border. Expect local smoke close new and active fires across the province. Degraded conditions will persist in areas with local emissions. During a wildfire, smoke conditions can change quickly over short distances and can vary considerably hour-by-hour. Monitor the situation for any wildfires near your area at EmergencyInfoBC. Follow all emergency announcements relevant to your location. The next update will be available on September 01, 2025 and made available on the Province’s Air Quality Warnings webpage. ### As smoke levels increase, health risks increase. Limit time outdoors. Consider reducing or rescheduling outdoor sports, activities and events. You may experience mild and common symptoms such as eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches or a mild cough. More serious but less common symptoms include wheezing, chest pains or severe cough. If you think you are having a medical emergency, seek immediate medical assistance. People more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution, including people aged 65 and older, pregnant people, infants and young children, people with an existing illness or chronic health condition, and people who work outdoors, should reduce or reschedule strenuous activities outdoors and seek medical attention if experiencing symptoms. For more information on current air quality, visit https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/environment/air-land-water/air. Visit http://www.airhealth.ca for information on how to reduce your health risk and your personal contribution to pollution levels, as well as for current and forecast AQHI values. Please continue to monitor alerts and forecasts issued by Environment Canada.

Instruction

When indoors, keep windows and doors closed as much as possible. When there is an extreme heat event occurring with poor air quality, prioritize keeping cool. Protect your indoor air from wildfire smoke. Actions can include using a clean, good quality air filter in your ventilation system and/or a certified portable air cleaner that can filter fine particles. If you must spend time outdoors, a well-constructed, well-fitting and properly worn respirator type mask (such as a NIOSH-certified N95 or equivalent respirator) can reduce your exposure to the fine particles in the smoke. Even though exposure may be reduced, there can still be risks to health. Check in on others who are in your care or live nearby who may be more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution. Always follow guidance from local authorities. Learn more at https://www.canada.ca/wildfire-smoke.

Areas

Note

Service Notice – June 2025: The Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) CAP Service undergoes changes from time to time as the business of alerting evolves. For 2025, changes are expected to include... 1) ECCC's initiative to upgrade the presentation of alerts into Colour-Coded Weather Alerts is planned for deployment for later in 2025. Data changes will appear in CAP-CP upon this deployment, 2) SAME event codes for a few alert types are updated and 3) other minor improvements and corrections. For more information on these changes: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/ | Notification de service – juin 2025: Le service du PAC d’Environnement et Changement climatique Canada (ECCC) subit périodiquement des changements à mesure que le système d’alerte évolue. Pour 2025, il y aura des changements incluant... 1) l'initiative d'ECCC visant à améliorer la présentation des alertes sous forme d'alertes météorologiques codées par couleur est prévue d’être déployée plus tard en 2025. Des changements aux données apparaîtront dans le PC-PAC lors de ce déploiement, 2) des codes d’événement MSSC pour quelques types d’alerte ont été mis à jour et 3) d’autres améliorations et corrections mineures. Pour plus d’informations sur ces changements: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/

Description

The regions of BC listed are being impacted or are likely to be impacted by wildfire smoke over the next 24-48 hours. - B.C. North Peace River: includes the City of Fort St John and all communities along Hwy 97 extending from Farmington to Pink Mountain; Hwy 29 including Moberly Lake, Hudson’s Hope; also includes Rolla, Clayhurst and Goodlow. - B.C. South Peace River: includes Chetwynd, Dawson Creek, Pouce Coupe, and Tumbler Ridge. - Chilcotin: includes Hansville, Alexis Creek, Chilanko Forks, Tatla Lake, Nimpo Lake, Anahim Lake, and the southern half of Tweedsmuir Park. - Fort Nelson: includes Fort Nelson, Muskwa, Prophet River, Buckinghorse River, Sikanni Chief, and Hwy 77 north to the Yukon border. Expect local smoke close new and active fires across the province. Degraded conditions will persist in areas with local emissions. During a wildfire, smoke conditions can change quickly over short distances and can vary considerably hour-by-hour. Monitor the situation for any wildfires near your area at EmergencyInfoBC. Follow all emergency announcements relevant to your location. The next update will be available on September 01, 2025 and made available on the Province’s Air Quality Warnings webpage. ### As smoke levels increase, health risks increase. Limit time outdoors. Consider reducing or rescheduling outdoor sports, activities and events. You may experience mild and common symptoms such as eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches or a mild cough. More serious but less common symptoms include wheezing, chest pains or severe cough. If you think you are having a medical emergency, seek immediate medical assistance. People more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution, including people aged 65 and older, pregnant people, infants and young children, people with an existing illness or chronic health condition, and people who work outdoors, should reduce or reschedule strenuous activities outdoors and seek medical attention if experiencing symptoms. For more information on current air quality, visit https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/environment/air-land-water/air. Visit http://www.airhealth.ca for information on how to reduce your health risk and your personal contribution to pollution levels, as well as for current and forecast AQHI values. Please continue to monitor alerts and forecasts issued by Environment Canada.

Instruction

When indoors, keep windows and doors closed as much as possible. When there is an extreme heat event occurring with poor air quality, prioritize keeping cool. Protect your indoor air from wildfire smoke. Actions can include using a clean, good quality air filter in your ventilation system and/or a certified portable air cleaner that can filter fine particles. If you must spend time outdoors, a well-constructed, well-fitting and properly worn respirator type mask (such as a NIOSH-certified N95 or equivalent respirator) can reduce your exposure to the fine particles in the smoke. Even though exposure may be reduced, there can still be risks to health. Check in on others who are in your care or live nearby who may be more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution. Always follow guidance from local authorities. Learn more at https://www.canada.ca/wildfire-smoke.

Areas

Note

Service Notice – June 2025: The Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) CAP Service undergoes changes from time to time as the business of alerting evolves. For 2025, changes are expected to include... 1) ECCC's initiative to upgrade the presentation of alerts into Colour-Coded Weather Alerts is planned for deployment for later in 2025. Data changes will appear in CAP-CP upon this deployment, 2) SAME event codes for a few alert types are updated and 3) other minor improvements and corrections. For more information on these changes: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/ | Notification de service – juin 2025: Le service du PAC d’Environnement et Changement climatique Canada (ECCC) subit périodiquement des changements à mesure que le système d’alerte évolue. Pour 2025, il y aura des changements incluant... 1) l'initiative d'ECCC visant à améliorer la présentation des alertes sous forme d'alertes météorologiques codées par couleur est prévue d’être déployée plus tard en 2025. Des changements aux données apparaîtront dans le PC-PAC lors de ce déploiement, 2) des codes d’événement MSSC pour quelques types d’alerte ont été mis à jour et 3) d’autres améliorations et corrections mineures. Pour plus d’informations sur ces changements: https://comm.collab.science.gc.ca/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/dd_info@comm.collab.science.gc.ca/

Description

The regions of BC listed are being impacted or are likely to be impacted by wildfire smoke over the next 24-48 hours. - B.C. North Peace River: includes the City of Fort St John and all communities along Hwy 97 extending from Farmington to Pink Mountain; Hwy 29 including Moberly Lake, Hudson’s Hope; also includes Rolla, Clayhurst and Goodlow. - B.C. South Peace River: includes Chetwynd, Dawson Creek, Pouce Coupe, and Tumbler Ridge. - Chilcotin: includes Hansville, Alexis Creek, Chilanko Forks, Tatla Lake, Nimpo Lake, Anahim Lake, and the southern half of Tweedsmuir Park. - Fort Nelson: includes Fort Nelson, Muskwa, Prophet River, Buckinghorse River, Sikanni Chief, and Hwy 77 north to the Yukon border. Expect local smoke close new and active fires across the province. Degraded conditions will persist in areas with local emissions. During a wildfire, smoke conditions can change quickly over short distances and can vary considerably hour-by-hour. Monitor the situation for any wildfires near your area at EmergencyInfoBC. Follow all emergency announcements relevant to your location. The next update will be available on September 01, 2025 and made available on the Province’s Air Quality Warnings webpage. ### As smoke levels increase, health risks increase. Limit time outdoors. Consider reducing or rescheduling outdoor sports, activities and events. You may experience mild and common symptoms such as eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches or a mild cough. More serious but less common symptoms include wheezing, chest pains or severe cough. If you think you are having a medical emergency, seek immediate medical assistance. People more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution, including people aged 65 and older, pregnant people, infants and young children, people with an existing illness or chronic health condition, and people who work outdoors, should reduce or reschedule strenuous activities outdoors and seek medical attention if experiencing symptoms. For more information on current air quality, visit https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/environment/air-land-water/air. Visit http://www.airhealth.ca for information on how to reduce your health risk and your personal contribution to pollution levels, as well as for current and forecast AQHI values. Please continue to monitor alerts and forecasts issued by Environment Canada.

Instruction

When indoors, keep windows and doors closed as much as possible. When there is an extreme heat event occurring with poor air quality, prioritize keeping cool. Protect your indoor air from wildfire smoke. Actions can include using a clean, good quality air filter in your ventilation system and/or a certified portable air cleaner that can filter fine particles. If you must spend time outdoors, a well-constructed, well-fitting and properly worn respirator type mask (such as a NIOSH-certified N95 or equivalent respirator) can reduce your exposure to the fine particles in the smoke. Even though exposure may be reduced, there can still be risks to health. Check in on others who are in your care or live nearby who may be more likely to be impacted by outdoor air pollution. Always follow guidance from local authorities. Learn more at https://www.canada.ca/wildfire-smoke.