Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s low snowpack, early-season melt raise drought concern: province

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2025 01:14 PM
  • B.C.'s low snowpack, early-season melt raise drought concern: province

British Columbia's latest snowpack and water supply bulletin says drier, warmer weather last month has contributed to an early melt, raising concern for widespread drought this summer.

By early May, the bulletin says about five per cent of B.C.'s annual snowpack has typically melted, but 15 per cent had melted by the start of this month.

The bulletin from the province says snowpack was an average of 71 per cent of normal as of May 1, decreasing from 79 per cent of normal on April 1. 

The figure is slightly higher than last year, when B.C.'s snowpack was an average of 66 per cent of what would be normal on May 1.

The bulletin says low snowpackearly snowmelt and warm seasonal weather forecasts all point to "elevated drought" this summer.

It says rivers on Vancouver Island, the South Coast and in northeastern B.C., where snowmelt is not a significant contributor this spring, are flowing "at or near record low levels for early May."

Still, the bulletin notes spring and summer temperatures and precipitation are also key factors that will influence drought conditions.

Seasonal weather forecasts from Environment Canada in late April indicate a greater likelihood of above-normal temperatures in B.C. through July, it says.

The bulletin says May is forecast to be wetter than normal in parts of northern B.C., while it's expected to be drier in the south.

Snow basins are greater in higher-elevation regions compared with 2024 as more snow accumulated throughout the season, it says, but lower-elevation basins tend to have a lower level due to earlier melting.

Snowpack levels on May 1 were under 60 per cent or "well-below" normal in the Upper Fraser West, Lower Thompson, Nicola, Bridge, Skagit, Central Coast, Similkameen, and Skeena-Nass basins, the bulletin says.

There is no elevated flood risk based on the current snowpack. However, in areas with low snowpack, the bulletin notes key flood risks shift toward heavy rain, either short-duration events or prolonged periods of wet weather.

"It is important to note that May and June are wet months through the B.C. Interior with the potential for extreme precipitation patterns," it says, adding the flood season can extend into July in the Rockies and the northeast.

"Therefore, precipitation poses a flood risk through the spring even with limited snowpack," the bulletin says.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

North Vancouver RCMP arrest a man who claimed to be a police officer

North Vancouver RCMP arrest a man who claimed to be a police officer
Mounties in North Vancouver say they've arrested a man for impersonating an officer and they believe there may be more than one victim.  Police have released a photo of a dark grey Ford F-150 that they say was seized when the driver was arrested earlier this month, and they're asking if anyone else was pulled over by the truck. 

North Vancouver RCMP arrest a man who claimed to be a police officer

B.C. doles out grant funding to bolster food manufacturing sector

B.C. doles out grant funding to bolster food manufacturing sector
Jobs Minister Diana Gibson says money from the province's manufacturing jobs fund will go to seven B.C. companies, including $2 million to Kelowna-based Farming Karma Fruit Co. for a new processing facility and equipment.

B.C. doles out grant funding to bolster food manufacturing sector

Mountain biking groups 'stretched thin' with trail work as popularity grows

Mountain biking groups 'stretched thin' with trail work as popularity grows
The outdoors were a refuge for many during the pandemic as people hit their local trail networks to mountain bike, hike, run and walk, but advocates in British Columbia say the value of trails isn't reflected in the level of support they receive. Deanne Cote, executive director of the North Shore Mountain Bike Association, said no one could have anticipated the surge in people using the local trails.

Mountain biking groups 'stretched thin' with trail work as popularity grows

Conservatives say there will be no media seats on Poilievre's election campaign

Conservatives say there will be no media seats on Poilievre's election campaign
The Conservative party is breaking from tradition and will not be allowing media onboard planes and buses for Pierre Poilievre's election campaign. In an email Tuesday, national campaign director Jenni Byrne says costs for travel have "risen considerably," as has the capacity for digital and remote access to public events.

Conservatives say there will be no media seats on Poilievre's election campaign

Liberals lagging well behind other parties on nominating candidates as election looms

Liberals lagging well behind other parties on nominating candidates as election looms
With a federal election call expected any day now, the Liberal party is trailing well behind its rivals on nominating candidates. The Conservatives have nominated 275 candidates out of 343 ridings, the NDP has 217 candidates and the Green Party has 208 — but the Liberal party has so far nominated just 185 candidates.

Liberals lagging well behind other parties on nominating candidates as election looms

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology
The Office of the Auditor General of B.C. says in the report that defined methodologies to calculate forest carbon projections were not used for decisions such as the determining annual allowable timber cutting. 

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology