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Detroit faces toxic smoke from Ontario wildfires on top of heat

July 16, 2026

Michigan faces a dangerous combination of hazardous air quality and extreme heat as smoke from Canadian wildfires near Lake Superior spreads across the state. Air quality readings have reached critically hazardous levels, with monitors near Marquette registering an index of 955—more than three times the EPA's hazardous threshold of 300. The wildfire smoke, originating from fires burning over a million acres in Ontario and tens of thousands in Minnesota, is expected to affect Michigan throughout the summer depending on wind patterns.

Who is affected

  • All Michigan residents, particularly those in the Upper Peninsula and southern Lower Peninsula/Metro Detroit
  • Vulnerable populations: older adults, children, outdoor workers, and pregnant people
  • People with pre-existing conditions: heart disease, asthma, and COPD patients
  • Approximately two dozen Detroit residents who may have died from 2023's wildfire smoke
  • Individuals already ill from Michigan's ongoing cyclosporiasis outbreak

What action is being taken

  • Michigan regulators issued a statewide air quality alert for July 15-16
  • EGLE meteorologists are monitoring smoke movement and providing forecasts
  • State meteorologists are tracking weather fronts moving through Michigan
  • Healthcare professionals like registered nurse Kindra Weid are advising people to check airnow.gov for updates and monitor symptoms closely

Why it matters

  • This event represents a significant public health crisis combining two threat multipliers—hazardous air quality and extreme heat—that compound existing health vulnerabilities. The situation reflects broader climate change impacts, as human-caused climate change increases heat waves, droughts, and fire weather conditions. Wildfires have already reversed decades of air quality improvements achieved through the Clean Air Act, demonstrating how climate-driven disasters can undermine environmental progress and threaten lives.

What's next

  • The statewide air quality alert could extend into Friday
  • Michigan is likely to experience wildfire smoke from Minnesota and Ontario fires throughout the summer, with visibility depending on wind direction
  • Temperatures are expected to cool slightly from 100°F Wednesday to 92°F Thursday and 90°F Friday in Detroit

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com