TikTok videos falsely claiming that catastrophic wildfires plaguing Canada have been started deliberately via helicopter, drone, or “Directed Energy Weapons” have proliferated across social media, garnering millions of views.
Fact-checkers at various news agencies have already debunked several of these videos, some of which still remain viewable on the platform. Media Matters has previously highlighted TikTok’s failure to moderate misinformation about climate change, abortion, and other issues, including harmful dieting and eating disorder content targeting young people. The rapid spread of misinformation related to climate change-driven natural disasters should put TikTok moderators on high alert during wildfires, particularly those that end up endangering the health of millions of people in multiple countries.
This season’s wildfires have been impacting Canada since March but received little coverage in U.S. media until smoke reached the East Coast in recent weeks. New Yorkers saw smoky orange skies and experienced unprecedented poor air quality, and wildfire smoke is still lingering over several cities.
Canada’s ongoing fire season, which has already seen roughly 12 million acres burned, bears the fingerprints of climate change. An unusually warm, dry spring throughout much of the country left soils dry with plenty of tinder — according to an article in Nature, Eastern Canada “had around 50% less spring precipitation than usual.” Additionally, the journal notes that “Canada has more large fires, they are burning larger areas and the fire season is getting longer — it now starts about a week earlier and ends a week later than it did 50 years ago.”
“Climate change is definitely a factor that is causing these extreme conditions to occur more frequently,” said Piyush Jain, a research scientist at the Canadian Forest Service.
Meanwhile, there is currently no evidence that any of the large wildfires are the work of arsonists. On the contrary, experts say that many of the fires in Quebec were started by lightning, which is also amplified by hot, dry weather. Even if there was an indication that arson played a significant role in starting the Canadian fires, it still wouldn’t change the fact that the climate crisis is making wildfires larger and more deadly.
Right-wing conspiracy theories and misinformation about the fires aim to distract from this clear and well-documented connection.