Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Premier Says Climate Change Is Sparking Need For National Forest Fire Plan

The Canadian Press, 19 May, 2016 12:39 PM
    OTTAWA — Climate change is leading to more wildfires and the country needs a national forest firefighting strategy, says B.C. Premier Christy Clark.
     
    While the country has been transfixed by the raging fires around Fort McMurray in northern Alberta, British Columbia's interior is experiencing similar fire conditions this spring that have received far less attention.
     
    "The federal government has to help us to come together and come up with a national forest fire-fighting strategy," Clark said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
     
    "We've got a lot of experience with this in British Columbia."
     
    The labour-intensive job of clearing flammable debris on the forest floor is just one aspect of controlling wildfires, she said, as is pooling national fire-fighting resources among provinces to attack the country's hot spots.
     
    "That has begun," said Clark, adding more needs to be done "especially in terms of predictive work on where the fires will likely be."
     
     
    About 80 wildfires are currently burning in B.C., many of them east of the Rocky Mountains and essentially part of the same boreal forest conditions that have consumed hundreds of thousands of hectares around Fort McMurray, forced the evacuation of more than 80,000 people and disrupted about a million barrels a day of oilsands production.
     
    Because of the oilsands link, talk of climate change as a contributing factor in the Alberta wildfires has proven to be politically toxic — even though scientists have been predicting and tracking increased fire losses due to global warming for more than two decades.
     
    Clark said dry forests and longer fire seasons mean the problem of fire damage is only going to get worse. This year's B.C. fire season was the earliest on record, she said.  
     
    "I make no secret, I tell people every day, one of the reasons we have so many terrible fires annually now — and almost every year is worse than the last — is because our climate is drying and our climate is drying because of climate change," said the B.C. premier.
     
    "It's urgent that we fight climate change and do everything we can to beat it, because this isn't going to get better. Fires are going to get worse and it's happening all over North America."
     
    British Columbia, said Clark, is "girding for what's going to come next."
     
    The B.C. government has not yet needed to call for federal military assistance to fight the fires this year, as happened in Fort McMurray, but Clark said it continues to monitor the situation closely.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    5 More Attawapiskat Kids Attempted Suicide On Friday Evening, Chief Says

    5 More Attawapiskat Kids Attempted Suicide On Friday Evening, Chief Says
    ATTAWAPISKAT, Ont. — The chief of a remote northern Ontario First Nation that declared a state of emergency on April 9 says more young people have attempted to take their lives.

    5 More Attawapiskat Kids Attempted Suicide On Friday Evening, Chief Says

    Group Wants Better Education About Genocide For Canadian High-School Students

    Group Wants Better Education About Genocide For Canadian High-School Students
    Her late mother, Ann Kazimirski, was a Holocaust survivor who championed the cause until her death 10 years ago.

    Group Wants Better Education About Genocide For Canadian High-School Students

    Mothers Of Drug Victims To Carry Their Children's Voices To United Nations

    Mothers Of Drug Victims To Carry Their Children's Voices To United Nations
    May's daughter Jac, 35, died on Aug. 21, 2012, after overdosing on pain medication prescribed to help her cope with a flesh-eating disease she'd contracted after years of addiction and life on the streets.

    Mothers Of Drug Victims To Carry Their Children's Voices To United Nations

    Signs Point To End Of 16 Years Of NDP In Manitoba Election Tuesday

    WINNIPEG — One of Canada's two remaining NDP governments finds itself on the ropes as it heads into an election Tuesday with polls suggesting Manitoba voters are ready to turn to the Progressive Conservatives.

    Signs Point To End Of 16 Years Of NDP In Manitoba Election Tuesday

    Precarious Work, Technological Advances Drive Basic Income Interest

    Precarious Work, Technological Advances Drive Basic Income Interest
    The amount increased depending on the number of people living in each household, maxing out at $3,969, or nearly $23,500 in 2016 currency, for a family of five or more.

    Precarious Work, Technological Advances Drive Basic Income Interest

    Facebook's Demands For Users' Photo IDs To Unlock Accounts Inappropriate: Lawyer

    Facebook's Demands For Users' Photo IDs To Unlock Accounts Inappropriate: Lawyer
    TORONTO — Thousands of Sarah Bell's online friends knew her only by her roller derby nickname, R'effin Adora Bell.

    Facebook's Demands For Users' Photo IDs To Unlock Accounts Inappropriate: Lawyer