Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Burns Bog Fire 50 Per Cent Contained, Industrial Park Evacuation Ends

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2016 11:59 AM
    DELTA, B.C. — An evacuation order has been lifted and business has resumed in an industrial park in Delta, B.C., as crews gain the upper hand on a nearby wildfire.
     
    The 78-hectare fire in Burns Bog, south of Vancouver, is estimated to be about half contained, and Delta fire Chief Dan Copeland hopes roughly eighty firefighters will have it fully contained sometime today.
     
    Highway 17, which runs along one flank of the bog, remains closed as first responders use it to get to the still-smouldering fire, which broke out on Sunday and was fanned by strong winds.
     
    Flames that jumped a road at the height of the blaze had prompted the evacuation of Tilbury Industrial Park, which affected nearly two dozen businesses, including a lumber mill, but firefighters were able to save all the properties. 
     
    Cooler weather on Monday and showers early this morning helped crews make headway.
     
    A further update on progress is to be provided later today as officials continue to try to pinpoint the fire's cause.
     
    Eliza Olson, founder of the Burns Bog Conservation Society, said about 90 per cent of the peat bog is expected to regenerate in  coming years, but it could take a century before the entire area recovers.
     
    Olson estimated the 30-square-kilometre nature reserve in Delta is believed to be the largest undeveloped urban wilderness area in North America.
     
     
    "That's one of the beauties of having Burns Bog here in the water table," she said in an interview Monday.
     
    "Because it's at the mouth of the Fraser River, it's an estuary-raised bog. You normally don't find a raised bog this far south."
     
    Burns Bog is one of North America's largest peat bogs and flames can sink under the dry peat, where they burn out of sight.
     
    But fire officials have said ground conditions and a quick response from firefighters kept the flames from burrowing beneath the peat, where the fire would have the potential to burn for weeks.
     
    Delta police have said it could take at least a week to extinguish the blaze.
     
    Mayor Lois Jackson called the fire a "major emergency" and said the community remains under provincial emergency status.
     
    She said Metro Vancouver was monitoring air quality as smoke had drifted into Vancouver, but conditions had improved since Sunday and no general advisory was issued.
     
    Delta plans to consult with Metro Vancouver's Burns Bog scientific advisory panel for guidance in the recovery of the nature reserve, Jackson said.
     
    "It's a very special area and we're working very hard to bring it back to what it was, if we can."
     
    Olson said the bog's acidic, peat-forming ecosystem includes rare plants, such as cloudberries, called bakeapples in Newfoundland and Labrador, and velvet-leafed blueberries, along with two species of dragonflies among its diverse inspect species.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog
    The Independent Investigations Office, the body that probes serious incidents involving police, issued a report saying the officer used reasonable force when she shot the 23-year-old man in a Safeway parking lot in December 2014.  

    Transit Officer Used 'Reasonable Force' In Fatal Confrontation In Surrey: Police Watchdog

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident
    Snohomish County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Shari Ireton said Tony Clyde Reed, 49, crossed into the United States from Mexico and was arrested by U.S. Marshals.

    Man Arrested In Case Of Missing Couple, One Of Whom Is Said To Be Former B.C. Resident

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring
      Rangers filed a criminal complaint Monday against three members of the group known as High on Life SundayFundayz that accuses them of stepping onto a geothermal feature.

    Canadian-based Group Faces Complaint After Walking To Yellowstone Hot Spring

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report
    CALGARY — A new assessment of the economic impact of the Fort McMurray wildfires says close to $1 billion of oilsands production has been lost.

    Nearly $1b Of Oilsands Production Lost Due To Fort McMurray, Alta., Fire: Report

    Climate Advisory Panel States Dissatisfaction In Open Letter To B.C. Premier

      Seven people on the climate change leadership team have signed an open letter to Premier Christy Clark, saying the province is in "no position to delay or scale back efforts."

    Climate Advisory Panel States Dissatisfaction In Open Letter To B.C. Premier

    Halifax Mother Who Lost Daughter To Depression Says More Youth Help Needed

    Carolyn Fox says her experience with her daughter Cayley, who died Jan. 22, has shown her that there aren't enough treatment options and supports for young people in the health system.

    Halifax Mother Who Lost Daughter To Depression Says More Youth Help Needed