Publication Abstracts

Field et al. 2025

Field, R.D., H. Jethva, P.A. Wales, T. McCabe, S.B. Henderson, O.E. Clifton, K. Tsigaridis, D.C. Morton, N.A. MacKendrick, E. Orland, C. Tymstra, P. Jain, M. Follette-Cook, R.C. Levy, L. Ott, and O. Torres, 2025: A fire-driven shift in Canadian air quality concerns mirrors trends in the US. Earth's Future, 13, no. 12, e2025EF007041, doi:10.1029/2025EF007041.

The summer of 2023 was the most significant wildfire and smoke season on record in Canada. Data from five different satellite instruments going back to 2001 show that Canada and most provinces and territories experienced peak visible-wavelength aerosol optical depth and ultraviolet aerosol index values in 2023. Longer-term, 2023 had the highest number of "smoke" or "haze" reports in weather records by a factor of two compared with the previous record in 1981, and by a factor of seven compared with the 1953-2022 average. These reports show an east-to-west shift in Canada's summer air pollution patterns. Smoke and haze in eastern Canada have decreased since the 1980s because of pollution control measures domestically and in the US. On the other hand, wildfire smoke has increased in the Northwest Territories, British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan since the 2010s, and is now the main air quality concern in western Canada. Interpreting the analysis here for Canada alongside previous work over the US, there was a shift over North America in summer air quality concerns from the east to the west. Climate model projections suggest more wildfire-driven smoke in the future throughout North America, particularly in the west. In contrast to air pollution from smokestacks and tailpipes that can be addressed at the source through government regulation, a future with more wildfire smoke will require downwind mitigation and will be the responsibility of public health officials.

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BibTeX Citation

@article{fi02400q,
  author={Field, R. D. and Jethva, H. and Wales, P. A. and McCabe, T. and Henderson, S. B. and Clifton, O. E. and Tsigaridis, K. and Morton, D. C. and MacKendrick, N. A. and Orland, E. and Tymstra, C. and Jain, P. and Follette-Cook, M. and Levy, R. C. and Ott, L. and Torres, O.},
  title={A fire-driven shift in Canadian air quality concerns mirrors trends in the US},
  year={2025},
  journal={Earth's Future},
  volume={13},
  number={12},
  pages={e2025EF007041},
  doi={10.1029/2025EF007041},
}

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RIS Citation

TY  - JOUR
ID  - fi02400q
AU  - Field, R. D.
AU  - Jethva, H.
AU  - Wales, P. A.
AU  - McCabe, T.
AU  - Henderson, S. B.
AU  - Clifton, O. E.
AU  - Tsigaridis, K.
AU  - Morton, D. C.
AU  - MacKendrick, N. A.
AU  - Orland, E.
AU  - Tymstra, C.
AU  - Jain, P.
AU  - Follette-Cook, M.
AU  - Levy, R. C.
AU  - Ott, L.
AU  - Torres, O.
PY  - 2025
TI  - A fire-driven shift in Canadian air quality concerns mirrors trends in the US
JA  - Earth's Future
JO  - Earth's Future
VL  - 13
IS  - 12
SP  - e2025EF007041
DO  - 10.1029/2025EF007041
ER  -

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