Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. officials warn of lightning-caused wildfires expected this week

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2023 04:52 PM
  • B.C. officials warn of lightning-caused wildfires expected this week

British Columbia wildfire officials have warned of an uptick in lightning-caused wildfires later this week, heading into the hottest, driest stretch of the summer.

Cliff Chapman, operations director for the BC Wildfire Service, said the lightning that's expected to be "widespread" across the province is more likely to hit higher, mountainous terrain, but strikes are also possible in or around communities.

It's still early in the summer and wildfires have already scorched nearly 10,500 square kilometres of land in B.C., he told a news conference on Wednesday.

That represents the third-highest burned area ever recorded in B.C., and Chapman said he believes it's possible 2023 may surpass the previous record.

The majority of the burned area is in northeastern B.C., a region that Chapman said hasn't seen a break since the wildfire season took off in April.

To bolster firefighting capacity, 60 personnel from the United States were expected to arrive in B.C. on Thursday, along with 100 firefighters from Mexico, he said.

"In the next few days, those resources will help support our fire suppression efforts in the north, allowing us the ability to rest some of our own staff, and also allowing us the ability to have preparedness resources ready for new starts in the south."

Matt MacDonald, the lead forecaster for the wildfire service, said the latest guidance from Environment Canada projects a high probability of above-normal temperatures persisting through to August, raising the risk of ignitions.

There's also no relief in sight from persistent drought conditions. Small amounts of rain won't be enough to reduce the stress in B.C.'s forests, he told the briefing.

That forecast comes on the heels of an especially hot and dry June, when many areas of the province received 70 to 80 per cent less rain than usual, he said.

The role of climate change cannot be ignored in assessing heat waves, drought and wildfire conditions in the province, MacDonald added.

"We're seeing exactly what climate change experts have been alerting us to, which is a higher frequency of extreme weather events," he said, noting seven of the province's 10 busiest wildfire seasons on record have occurred in the last decade.

Both officials emphasized the importance of detecting fires quickly after they start. Chapman thanked members of the public for making reports that helped crews douse or hold three dozen out ofmore than 40 new blazes sparked over the Canada Day long weekend, the majority of which were caused by lightning, he said.

Additional campfire bans are on the way in response to the increasing risk.

As of noon on Friday, Chapman said campfires will no longer be permitted in the Kamloops Fire Centre and all areas of the Coastal Fire Centre, except Haida Gwaii.

Campfires have been banned since last month across the Prince George Fire Centre and in the driest sections of the Northwest and Coastal fire centres, including Vancouver Island. 

Campfires no larger than half-a-metre by half-a-metre are permitted in the Cariboo and Southeast fire centres, where wildfire danger is mostly ranked as moderate.

About 100 blazes are currently burning across the province, including a 5,715-square-kilometre fire south of Fort Nelson that's the largest ever recorded in B.C.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. moved ahead with ending letter grades despite parent, teacher, student concerns

B.C. moved ahead with ending letter grades despite parent, teacher, student concerns
Education Minister Rachna Singh said last week that about half of all public school districts have already tested and adopted the new reporting style during a modernization of curriculum that started in 2016, while the rest would implement the change this September.

B.C. moved ahead with ending letter grades despite parent, teacher, student concerns

Province announces 100K in mental health for South Asians

Province announces 100K in mental health for South Asians
The funding will support three part-time outreach workers and others who will engage South Asians who are homeless or at risk of being homeless. The supports are expected to help between 50 and 75 people who use drugs as well as 150 to 200 family members.  

Province announces 100K in mental health for South Asians

Thousands mourn Sikh leader's funeral

Thousands mourn Sikh leader's funeral
Thousands of mourners from the Sikh community descended upon the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey on Sunday morning, to pay respects to the Gurdwara president, Hardeep Singh Nijjar. Nijjar was shot mutliple times a week ago in the parking lot of the Gurdwara and killed in his truck.

Thousands mourn Sikh leader's funeral

Advocates urge B.C. leaders to halt planned evictions at Abbotsford, B.C., tent camp

Advocates urge B.C. leaders to halt planned evictions at Abbotsford, B.C., tent camp
The BC Civil Liberties Association and Pivot Legal Society want Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon to stop any evictions at the Lonzo Park encampment, located on provincially owned land originally intended as a park-and-ride in Abbotsford. The letter reminds Kahlon that several B.C. Supreme Court rulings have found forcible eviction is illegal when other housing options are inadequate.  

Advocates urge B.C. leaders to halt planned evictions at Abbotsford, B.C., tent camp

Man in hospital with serious injuries, IIO called in

Man in hospital with serious injuries, IIO called in
A man is in hospital with serious injuries and B-C's independent police watchdog -- the Independent Investigations Office -- has been called to the scene. The I-I-O says police say they were called to a report of a potentially impaired driver on Highway 1 through West Vancouver and told investigators there was an exchange of gunfire as they arrived.

Man in hospital with serious injuries, IIO called in

Sunshine Coast shooting victim identified

Sunshine Coast shooting victim identified
Investigators say a 56-year-old from Sechelt died from multiple gunshot wounds early Thursday morning. The victim was found outside a residence in Halfmoon Bay and died at the scene.

Sunshine Coast shooting victim identified