Fort McMurray Wildfire: Evacuation Orders Lifted North of Canadian Town

The raging wildfire forced the evacuation of more than 80,000 people and the closure of oil sands operations. Officials said conditions have improved.

Home foundations and shells of vehicles are nearly all that remain in a residential neighborhood destroyed by a wildfire on May 6, 2016 in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. The wildfires forced the evacuation of more than 80,000 residents from the town.Scott Olson / Getty Images
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FORT MCMURRAY, Alberta — Alberta officials on Saturday lifted mandatory evacuation orders in some areas north of Fort McMurray, where a raging wildfire has forced the evacuation of more than 80,000 people and the closure of oil sands operations.

Officials said conditions have improved in some parts north of the oil sands city. Suncor Energy Inc. and Syncrude will now be able to resume their idled northern oil sands operations and bring back evacuated workers.

About 8,000 oil sands workers in camps north of Fort McMurray were evacuated last Tuesday after gusting winds and high temperatures caused the fire to move rapidly toward them. That was in addition to the 80,000 people ordered to evacuate Fort McMurray nearly 2 ½ weeks ago.

Northern Alberta is the heartland of Canada's oil sands industry and the effects of the enormous wildfire on the oil sector have prompted forecasters to trim their 2016 economic growth predictions for the entire country.

Related: Canadian Premier to Fort McMurray Fire Refugees: You Can Go Home Soon

The Alberta oil sands have the third-largest reserves of oil in the world behind Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Its workers largely live in Fort McMurray, a former frontier outpost-turned-city whose residents come from all over Canada.

The blaze, which began May 1, has covered 1,930 square miles, including areas that are still burning and those where the fire has already been put out, along with nearly three square miles in the neighboring province of Saskatchewan.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, right, and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley look over the devastation during a visit to Fort McMurray, Canada, on May 13, 2016.Jason Franson / AP

More than 2,400 buildings were destroyed in Fort McMurray, but 90 percent of the city remains intact, including essential infrastructure like the hospital, water treatment plant and the airport.

Officials are hopeful that cooler temperatures, higher humidity and rain forecast over the weekend will help stop the growth and spread of the fire.

Alberta senior wildlife manager Chad Morrison said more favorable weather conditions over the last day or two have enabled officials to put more firefighters in key points on the ground.

Morrison said the province plans to bring in 1,000 firefighters over the next two weeks, adding to 1,100 already on the ground.

Officials hope to have the remaining evacuees return home starting June 1.

Morrison said so far the blaze has burned the same amount of forest as all fires consumed in Alberta last year.