Fact File: Does banning glyphosate-based herbicides prevent wildfires? Here’s what we know
A social media post shared a screenshot of a satellite map that shows Quebec experiencing fewer wildfires than the rest of Canada, and suggested it was because the province banned the use of glyphosate-based weed killers in 2001. Experts who study wildfires say Quebec has seen varied wildfire seasons since then — including an extreme burn in 2023 — despite a lack of glyphosate use. They say there is no evidence linking glyphosate to increased wildfire activity.
THE CLAIM
“Ahead of this wildfire season it is always important to remember that Quebec is the only jurisdiction in North America that doesn’t spray its forests with glyphosate for ‘forest management,'” reads an X post from last month with around 11,000 likes.
The post includes a screenshot of a “2025 wildfire map” that appears to mark wildfires across Canada and the United States with a flame icon. It bears the watermark of the Fire Information for Resource Management System US/Canada, a satellite fire map maintained by NASA, and the date Aug. 20, 2025.


