Thursday, May 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. invests $1 million in 'lightning reduction' technology in bid to reduce fires

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 May, 2026 11:07 AM
  • B.C. invests $1 million in 'lightning reduction' technology in bid to reduce fires

The British Columbia government is investing up to $1 million on field-testing new technology from a Vancouver company that aims to both predict and prevent lightning that may trigger wildfires.

Skyward Wildfire Technologies says it releases "lighting reduction material" into storms where high ignition risks are identified.

It says the material, which it describes as a "silica or basalt fibre with an aluminum nano-coating" enables electrical charge to "redistribute quietly inside the cloud," instead of building up and creating a cloud-to-ground lightning strike. 

The B.C. Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth says in a release that the province is delivering funding through Innovate BC and that Skyward also uses technology based on artificial intelligence to predict "areas of elevated lightning-caused wildfire risk."

Lightning has been a leading cause of wildfires in B.C., with about 70 per cent of blazes covering 97 per cent of all areas burned in 2024 triggered by the phenomenon.

The province says the field tests will be used to determine if Skyward's technology can meet B.C.'s wildfire prevention standards for potential application across Canada and beyond.

"The science isn't new: lightning suppression research goes back to the 1960s," the Skyward website says. "What's new is the precision to deploy it only where and when a fire might otherwise start."

Skyward says its lightning-reduction material is non-toxic and inert, and environmentally friendly compared to the release of thousands of litres of fire retardant or the smoke from a wildfire.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Charlie Riedel

MORE National ARTICLES

Bank of Canada leaves key interest rate unchanged at 2.25%

Bank of Canada leaves key interest rate unchanged at 2.25%
The Bank of Canada left its key interest rate unchanged Wednesday as it signalled the 2.25 per cent level is about right to balance keeping inflation in check with helping the economy grow. 

Bank of Canada leaves key interest rate unchanged at 2.25%

PM says new envoy to U.S. will have window to prepare for next phase of trade talks

PM says new envoy to U.S. will have window to prepare for next phase of trade talks
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada's next ambassador to Washington will have a window to prepare for the next phase of trade relations with the United States.

PM says new envoy to U.S. will have window to prepare for next phase of trade talks

Air Transat limits fallout from strike threat, flight cancellations under two dozen

Air Transat limits fallout from strike threat, flight cancellations under two dozen
Air Transat says it managed to cap its flight cancellations at just 18 as it prepared for a possible strike that has now been averted.

Air Transat limits fallout from strike threat, flight cancellations under two dozen

Recall petition issued for Alberta Premier Smith, two more ministers

Recall petition issued for Alberta Premier Smith, two more ministers
Elections Alberta says a recall petition has been issued for Premier Danielle Smith and two more of her United Conservative Party cabinet ministers.

Recall petition issued for Alberta Premier Smith, two more ministers

Heavy rain warnings, flood watch in B.C. as atmospheric river systems move in

Heavy rain warnings, flood watch in B.C. as atmospheric river systems move in
Much of British Columbia's south coast and parts of the southern Interior are under rain warnings as a series of atmospheric river systems hit the province.

Heavy rain warnings, flood watch in B.C. as atmospheric river systems move in

Canada wraps up G7 tech ministers' meeting after signing EU, U.K. deals

Canada wraps up G7 tech ministers' meeting after signing EU, U.K. deals
Canada ended a two-day meeting of G7 industry, digital and technology ministers Tuesday after signing agreements with European partners that are taking a tougher stand on regulating artificial intelligence than the United States.

Canada wraps up G7 tech ministers' meeting after signing EU, U.K. deals