North

Fort Simpson, N.W.T., sees fire protection work as a biofuel opportunity

The Liard and Mackenzie rivers may offer Fort Simpson some protection from wildfire — but the community is still flanked by dense forest on its western and southern sides, and leaders are thinking about how material from fire breaks can be put to good use.

'Our territory needs to push harder when it comes to green energy development'

A man standing before forest with a blue shirt and sunglasses on top of his head.
James Tsetso, the deputy mayor for the Village of Fort Simpson, sees opportunity in the trees around his community. He says material gathered from building fire breaks and thinning out the dense forest should be used for building projects or turned into energy. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

Kele Antoine, the chief of Łı́ı́dlı̨ı̨ Kų́ę́ First Nation, says building fire breaks around Fort Simpson should be approached the same way Dene people harvest a moose. 

"It's not just about harvesting an animal for the meat. There's clothing, there's artwork, there's tools, there's so much that could come out of that one animal," he explained. 

Antoine said timber and brush cleared from the land should be used completely — bigger logs can be used for building projects around the community like picnic tables, benches, gazebos and garden boxes. 

What can't be used for construction projects can be used to heat people's homes — offsetting the cost and emissions that come from using heating oil or diesel instead. 

"Let's not waste, let's use what's there and in the best way that we can," said Antoine. And, he pointed out, there's no shortage of dense forest around his community — a cause for concern, as the N.W.T. continues to battle an unprecedented wildfire year that has so far spared the Dehcho community of about 1,200.

The Liard and Mackenzie rivers may offer Fort Simpson some protection from wildfire — but the village is still flanked by dense forest on its western and southern sides. 

"There's a lot of areas that need a lot of work. There's a lot of untouched areas, you know, that have not had any burns in the last, in our recorded history, really," said Antoine. "We need to get to work this winter, we need to widen fire breaks, we need to harvest any of the biomass that's available."

Piles of brush and trees in an otherwise clear cut strip of rocky and sandy land.
A fire break that was build south of the sandpits in Yellowknife, photographed on Sept. 7. The City of Yellowknife did not respond to CBC's questions about what was happening with the brush, swept up into piles in this photo, by deadline. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

The landscape around Yellowknife has been drastically changed by huge fire breaks, built this summer to protect the city from encroaching wildfires. CBC News reached out to the city to see what had happened to the trees and brush that were cleared away, but did not receive a response by publication time.

How Fort Simpson is protecting itself from wildfire

The Village of Fort Simpson received a little more than $1 million in federal funding, through the Northwest Territories Association of Communities, for fire protection work this year. 

Sean Whelly, the village's mayor, said the money will be used to widen a fire break east of the Wild Rose Acres neighbourhood and to thin out mature spruce trees on the island's northern side. 

Though some of the brush clearing has already happened along Antoine Drive, Whelly said the village has to get contractors to bid for bigger parts of the fire protection work. He hopes the established fire break can be widened and the spruce trees thinned in the fall or next spring. 

A shrub, cut down to the ground.
A shrub that had been chopped down along Antoine Drive in Fort Simpson, N.W.T. on Aug. 30. The village has started doing some fire protection work — but needs to get contractors to bid on bigger elements of it, like widening a fire break east of Wild Rose Acres and thinning spruce trees on the island's north end. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

Whelly also expected the village's fire protection plan would be updated soon — adding more projects to the list that the federal funding can be used on, like building a break somewhere along Highway 1, near the landfill, where there are a lot of mature jack pine trees. 

The trees around Fort Simpson grow bigger and more densely than they do around Yellowknife, meaning the work to build and maintain firebreaks will be more onerous. 

"One million is not going to go that far," said Whelly. 

"We're hoping to get more money."

Wood and brush could be turned into energy: Deputy mayor

Like Łı́ı́dlı̨ı̨ Kų́ę́ First Nation's chief — Fort Simpson's deputy mayor also sees opportunities in the trees around his home. 

"I think our territory needs to push harder when it comes to green energy development," said James Tsetso. Most N.W.T. communities, including Fort Simpson, rely on diesel generators for energy. 

As the cost of running those diesel generators continues to rise, Tsetso said generating energy from wood and brush is the "right move" and a step toward a "better future." Right now, the brush people are clearing away from their homes in Fort Simpson is being turned into mulch at the dump. 

Tsetso said material from fire breaks can be turned into wood chips, which can then be turned into fuel through a process of wood gasification. Bigger timbers, he agreed, can be used to build homes and other projects while cleared land could be used for agriculture and farming. 

"We can create an industry just by utilizing renewable energy sources," said Tsetso. 

"This territory needs to start using resources around their communities in a more productive manner that's hopefully going to save communities from the impacts of wildfire devastation."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Liny Lamberink

Reporter/Editor

Liny Lamberink is a reporter for CBC North. She moved to Yellowknife in March 2021, after working as a reporter and newscaster in Ontario for five years. She is an alumna of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network. You can reach her at liny.lamberink@cbc.ca