Information can save lives — but only if people can understand it.
Every summer, Saskatchewan residents face dozens of wildfires, evacuation alerts, and fire bans, all from different sources. Between government updates, social posts, and rumours, it’s easy for people to miss what matters most: Is my community safe right now?
That’s the question FireEye set out to answer.
The Problem: Too Much Data, Not Enough Clarity
During the 2025 season, more than 260 fires were burning across the province. Each had its own reports, updates, and alert systems. Even seasoned emergency managers said it was hard to keep track.
FireEye simplifies the noise. It combines verified wildfire and weather data into one clean, interactive map — where every dot, line, and zone is easy to understand.
Instead of scanning multiple websites, users can open FireEye and instantly see:
Active wildfires
Current fire bans
Evacuation alerts and return-home updates
Real-time conditions near their community
No technical knowledge required — just tap, read, and decide.
The Human Side of Design
Behind the map are people who’ve lived through fire seasons. FireEye’s interface was built not just for analysts, but for families on the road, elders checking on loved ones, and first responders trying to share the right information fast.
When data is clear, action becomes faster — and safer.
The Future of Wildfire Awareness
As the platform grows, FireEye plans to integrate live air-quality reports, wind forecasts, and community status dashboards. The goal is one unified system for Saskatchewan: where anyone, anywhere, can understand what’s happening — without confusion.
In a province this vast, information is our best defense. FireEye is making sure it reaches everyone in time.

