B.C.'s wildfire season now 2nd-worst on record — behind only last year
Almost 10,000 square kilometres have been destroyed since April 1
This year's wildfire season is now the second-worst in B.C. history when it comes to the amount of land that's burned.
More than 945,000 hectares — almost 10,000 square kilometres — have been scorched by fires since April 1.
Last year, the record was set when more than 1.2 million hectares (12,000 square kilometres) of land were destroyed by wildfire.
The new total means B.C. has gone back to back with its most destructive summers of fire.
As of Friday, more than 550 fires were burning across the province. Sixty are considered fires of note, meaning they threaten people or property or are highly visible.
Most of the notable fires are in the province's southeast, northwest and Interior regions.
Nearly 5,000 people had been forced from their homes due to wildfire as of Thursday afternoon. Another 22,000 were under evacuation alerts.
Buildings lost
At least half a dozen buildings have reportedly been lost to fire this summer. Three burned near Takysie Lake in northern B.C. on Wednesday.
Several others were destroyed in the community of Lower Post, just south of the Yukon border.
Last summer saw more structural losses, with at least 200 buildings destroyed or damaged in the Cariboo and another 215 in the Thompson-Nicola district.
The Shovel Lake fire, burning between Burns Lake and Prince George, is still the largest in the province at more than 91,000 hectares (910 square kilometres) in size — nearly eight times the City of Vancouver.