Saturday, May 9, 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

Rehana Din Appointed President and CEO of PavCo, Succeeding Ken Cretney

Rehana Din Appointed President and CEO of PavCo, Succeeding Ken Cretney
The BC Pavilion Corporation (PavCo) has announced the appointment of Rehana Din as its new President and Chief Executive Officer, effective May 9, 2026. She will succeed longtime CEO Ken Cretney, who is set to retire on May 8 after 18 years with the organization, including 12 years at the helm.

Rehana Din Appointed President and CEO of PavCo, Succeeding Ken Cretney

Council approves 2026 policing priorities to strengthen public safety

Council approves 2026 policing priorities to strengthen public safety
Council has approved the City’s policing priorities for 2026, setting a strong focus on combating organized crime and extortion, completing the transition to the Surrey Police Service, and strengthening collaboration with community and health partners to improve public safety. 

Council approves 2026 policing priorities to strengthen public safety

Spring snow dump brings 30cm of accumulation on B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

Spring snow dump brings 30cm of accumulation on B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway
A low-pressure system dumped significant spring snow on a number of major British Columbia highways, hampering travel through the Interior, including on the Coquihalla where 30 centimetres was recorded.

Spring snow dump brings 30cm of accumulation on B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

Vets, MPs call on feds to launch honour review board to award Canadian Victoria Cross

Vets, MPs call on feds to launch honour review board to award Canadian Victoria Cross
The federal government is facing mounting calls to establish a military honours review board, and to finally award Canada's highest military honour.

Vets, MPs call on feds to launch honour review board to award Canadian Victoria Cross

Canada pledges $120M in aid for Sudan as brutal civil war enters fourth year

Canada pledges $120M in aid for Sudan as brutal civil war enters fourth year
Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand announced another $120 million in humanitarian and development aid for Sudan on Wednesday as the African nation's civil war enters its fourth year.

Canada pledges $120M in aid for Sudan as brutal civil war enters fourth year

2 Royal Navy sailors charged in fatal capsizing of military craft in Halifax harbour

2 Royal Navy sailors charged in fatal capsizing of military craft in Halifax harbour
Canadian military police have charged two members of the Royal Canadian Navy in the death last year of a sailor who was aboard a small military boat that capsized in Halifax harbour.

2 Royal Navy sailors charged in fatal capsizing of military craft in Halifax harbour