Fire Danger ( click for map ) is a relative index of how easy it is to ignite vegetation, how difficult a fire may be to control, and how much damage a fire may do.
| Low | ![]() |
Fires likely to be self-extinguishing and new ignitions unlikely. Any existing fires limited to smoldering in deep, drier layers. |
|---|---|---|
| Moderate | ![]() |
Creeping or gentle surface fires. Fires easily contained by ground crews with pumps and hand tools. |
| High | ![]() |
Moderate to vigorous surface fire with intermittent crown involvement. Challenging for ground crews to handle; heavy equipment (bulldozers, tanker trucks, aircraft) often required to contain fire. |
| Very High | ![]() |
High-intensity fire with partial to full crown involvement. Head fire conditions beyond the ability of ground crews; air attack with retardant required to effectively attack fire's head. |
| Extreme | ![]() |
Fast-spreading, high-intensity crown fire. Very difficult to control. Suppression actions limited to flanks, with only indirect actions possible against the fire's head. |
The Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index (FWI) System is a model that predicts the potential fire danger within the forest. This is achieved by modeling the dryness of the forest fuels (those parts of the forest that burn) and the potential fire behaviour (how fast and intense a fire may become).
The FWI system consists of six components that account for the effects of fuel moisture and fire behaviour. The first three components are fuel moisture codes and are numerical ratings of the moisture content of litter and other fine fuels, the average moisture content of loosely compacted organic layers of moderate depth, and the average moisture content of deep, compact organic layers.
The remaining three components are fire behavior indexes which represent the rate of fire spread, the fuel available for combustion, and the frontal fire intensity; their values rise as the fire danger increases.
Information courtesy of Natural Resources Canada.
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