Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. must urgently change forest strategies or face more wildfire disasters: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jun, 2023 09:55 AM
  • B.C. must urgently change forest strategies or face more wildfire disasters: report

British Columbia's independent forests watchdog is calling for the provincial government to make critical changes to how it manages forests to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfires.

The report, released Thursday by the B.C. Forest Practices Board, says risk mitigation currently focuses on areas near communities, but leaves the wider forest landscape "severely vulnerable."

It comes as the largest wildfire in the province's history, the Donnie Creek wildfire, continues to burn out of control in the remote northeast.

"The key is there's an urgency to this," board chair Keith Atkinson said in an interview. "We're obviously experiencing, maybe, our most severe year in front of us."

The report says in 2017, 2018, and 2021, B.C. experienced its three largest wildfire seasons in 102 years on record, affecting 34,000 square kilometres of land.

"If the way forests and fire are managed doesn’t change, B.C. will face many more catastrophic wildfire seasons," says the 22-page report, titled "Forest and Fire Management in B.C. — Toward Landscape Management."

It recommends B.C. develop a long-term fire management vision and action plan to support landscape resilience in forests that will span all levels of government.

"Bold and immediate action is required by the provincial government to align its actions and policies with a vision of landscape resilience and human coexistence with fire," says the report. 

"Unless B.C. is prepared to accept a future of increasingly frequent catastrophic wildfires and the associated costs and consequences, it is time for a paradigm shift in land management."

Government data shows 45 per cent of B.C.'s public land, estimated at 390,000 square kilometres, is at high to extreme fire risk. 

The report says B.C. spent about $800 million on fire suppression in 2021, but the indirect costs associated with the wildfire season could have been up to $24 billion.

"The current approach to managing the risks of catastrophic wildfires is to focus on risk reduction and management activities near communities, leaving the broader landscape in a severely vulnerable state," says the report. 

A shift to landscape fire management would create more resilient forest areas that are less vulnerable to catastrophic wildfires, says the report, which cites the need for increased collaboration with Indigenous peoples on fire and forest management

Landscape fire management through practices that include the creation of fuel breaks, an increase in the diversity, density and age of trees, and more use of cultural and prescribed burns in forest areas can protect the landscape from wildfire, the report says.

"Now is the time to be bold — not for relying on incremental adjustments," says the report.

Forests Minister Bruce Ralston said in a statement the report was a call to action to prevent wildfires.

"I appreciate this work from the Forest Practices Board, and in recent years we have taken actions that align with their recommendations, including doubling prevention programs, expanding prescribed and cultural burning, and launching new Forest Landscape Plans," he said. 

"The Forest Practices Board report reinforces that we need to keep working with our partners and taking critical steps to strengthen and expand wildfire planning, preparedness and response."

The BC Wildfire Service says the Donnie Creek fire has scorched more than 5,700 square kilometres of forest since it was sparked by lightning on May 12, and it may burn until winter. 

It is among more than 80 wildfires burning in the province. More than 9,600 square kilometres of land have been burned since April 1, putting the province on track for a record season.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey wanted man arrested

Surrey wanted man arrested
A 22-year-old man who was wanted by R-C-M-P in Surrey has been arrested. Mounties say Kwabena Bosiako was taken into custody this morning in New Westminster.

Surrey wanted man arrested

Senior punched in the face in an unprovoked assault: Coquitlam RCMP

Senior punched in the face in an unprovoked assault: Coquitlam RCMP
Police are asking for the public's help in finding a suspect who seriously injured an 85-year-old man in an unprovoked assault in Coquitlam. The Mounties say the suspect dropped the leashes and the dogs ran toward the victim before the suspect approached the man and punched him in the face.  

Senior punched in the face in an unprovoked assault: Coquitlam RCMP

Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada

Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada
The B.C. Wildfire Service says heavy equipment, helicopters and crews are attacking what is believed to be a human-caused fire. The wildfire service is reporting more than 80 active fires in British Columbia.

Wildfire roundup: What you need to know about blazes burning across Canada

Logging truck failure set off crash that killed 3 in Cranbrook, B.C.: RCMP

Logging truck failure set off crash that killed 3 in Cranbrook, B.C.: RCMP
The crash on Highway 3 last Wednesday involved three vehicles, but police say those who died were all in a Chevrolet Suburban.  RCMP say the collision analysis and reconstruction service is still investigating the crash. 

Logging truck failure set off crash that killed 3 in Cranbrook, B.C.: RCMP

BC Ferries wants public opinion on former buffet space

BC Ferries wants public opinion on former buffet space
B-C Ferries is asking for the public's help in deciding what to do with its former buffet spaces on its Tsawwassen-Swartz Bay route. It says an online survey will be open for three weeks and, using that feedback, it hopes to transform the space this fall.  

BC Ferries wants public opinion on former buffet space

Assault at a school in Maple Ridge

Assault at a school in Maple Ridge
Mounties in Ridge Meadows say they are investigating an assault at a local school. They say officers responded to the incident at a school at 116-B Avenue around 9:40 P-M on Saturday – outside of regular school hours.

Assault at a school in Maple Ridge