
Smoke in Toronto to get worse Thursday with air quality set to plummet
CTV
Toronto's air quality will get worse before it gets better as smoke from Canada's wildfires lingers in the city.
Toronto's air quality will get worse before it gets better as smoke from Canada's wildfires lingers in the city.
Forest fires burning in Quebec and Ontario have led to poor air quality in major cities in the U.S. and Canada, including New York, Ottawa, and Toronto.
An air quality warning from Environment Canada has been in effect since Monday and on Wednesday, Toronto reached level 7 on the national weather agency’s index, presenting a “high risk” to members of the public.
CP24 Meteorologist Bill Coulter said Thursday that smoke forecast models suggest Toronto’s air quality will begin to quickly deteriorate this morning.
“We will really start to see a deterioration of air quality and that will last through the late afternoon to about the dinner hour and then (there will be) a shift in wind directions,” he said on Thursday morning.
“We are looking at a period today from about 7 a.m. through late afternoon that is going to be much worse than yesterday.”
He said a change in wind direction this weekend along with consistent periods of rain should result in improved air quality.