Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Windstorm Cost Insurers $37 Million For Loss To Homes, Businesses, Vehicles

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2019 07:29 PM

    VANCOUVER — The insured cost of damage from the windstorm that raged through southern B.C. in December is over $37 million, and the Insurance Bureau of Canada says that pushed the price of extreme weather in the country last year to $1.9 billion.


    The storm knocked down large trees and power poles, leaving over 750,000 customers without power, some of them through Christmas.


    The insurance bureau says over 3,000 homes were damaged, boats were scattered and the pier in White Rock was cut in half.


    The bureau says in a news release that as the financial costs of a changing climate rises, it is working with all levels of government to advocate for increased investment to mitigate impacts of extreme weather.


    Those changes could include investments in infrastructure to protect communities from floods and fires, improvement building codes and shift development of homes and businesses away from areas of highest risk.


    Bureau vice-president, Pacific, Aaron Sutherland says the financial costs of climate change are increasing rapidly and the storm is the latest example of the need to improve and adapt to the new weather reality.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Helping Young Saudi Refugee Won't Hurt Raif Badawi's Case, Wife Says

    Canada Helping Young Saudi Refugee Won't Hurt Raif Badawi's Case, Wife Says
    Ensaf Haidar said the Canadian government did the right thing in granting refugee status to the 18-year-old woman who drew global attention after fleeing her allegedly abusive family.

    Canada Helping Young Saudi Refugee Won't Hurt Raif Badawi's Case, Wife Says

    Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Buy Pizza For U.S. Colleagues Hit By Shutdown

    Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Buy Pizza For U.S. Colleagues Hit By Shutdown
    Canadian air traffic controllers have bought hundreds of pizzas for their American counterparts over the past few days in what has become an industry-wide show of support during the U.S. government's partial shutdown.

    Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Buy Pizza For U.S. Colleagues Hit By Shutdown

    China Acting 'Arbitrarily' In Imposing Drug Case Death Sentence: Justin Trudeau

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he's very concerned to see China "acting arbitrarily" by applying the death penalty to a Canadian convicted of drug trafficking.

    China Acting 'Arbitrarily' In Imposing Drug Case Death Sentence: Justin Trudeau

    Chinese Court Awards Death Penalty To Canadian For Drug Peddling

    Chinese Court Awards Death Penalty To Canadian For Drug Peddling
    A Chinese Court Sentenced A Canadian Man To Death Monday In A Sudden Retrial In A Drug Smuggling Case That Is Likely To Escalate Tensions Between The Countries Over The Arrest Of A Top Chinese Technology Executive.

    Chinese Court Awards Death Penalty To Canadian For Drug Peddling

    Legalization Sparks Boom In Once-Stigmatized Field Of Marijuana Research

    "There were times when I was told you couldn't even use 'cannabis' and 'research' in the same sentence," he recalled.

    Legalization Sparks Boom In Once-Stigmatized Field Of Marijuana Research

    Mannequin Heads In Dumpster Give Delta, B.C., Cop A Fright After Recent Clothing Bin Deaths

    DELTA, B.C. — A routine patrol of an alley in downtown Ladner, B.C., gave police pause late Monday evening.

    Mannequin Heads In Dumpster Give Delta, B.C., Cop A Fright After Recent Clothing Bin Deaths