Thursday, May 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Electricity demand and temperatures hit record levels in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 May, 2026 04:18 PM
  • Electricity demand and temperatures hit record levels in B.C.

Warm weather across British Columbia has driven electricity demand to the highest level ever seen in May.

BC Hydro says residents using fans and air conditioners pushed demand to about 7,600 megawatts.

The record demand comes as temperature records continue to fall across B.C. as unseasonably warm weather persists, including in Vancouver, where a mark set more than 100 years ago was broken.

Environment Canada says Vancouver's high temperature on Monday reached 23.9 degrees, easily breaking the record of 22.2 degrees set in 1898.

The weather forecast agency says 19 communities set new daily highs for May 4 on Monday, including Pemberton, which reported a high of 31.5 degrees.

Meteorologists say the high temperatures are driven by a ridge of high pressure that will slowly cool down over the next few days before getting warm again this weekend.

The national hot spot on Monday was Lytton, B.C., at 31.9 degrees.

New daily temperature records were also set on Monday in Bella Coola, Campbell River, Duncan, Kitimat, Lillooet, Nanaimo, Port Alberni and Squamish, as well as in the Metro Vancouver communities of Richmond, West Vancouver and Pitt Meadows.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

MORE National ARTICLES

Almost half of former NDP voters don't recognize names of leadership candidates: poll

Almost half of former NDP voters don't recognize names of leadership candidates: poll
Nearly half of those who voted for the federal NDP at least once over the past four elections don't recognize the names of the current leadership candidates, a new poll suggests.

Almost half of former NDP voters don't recognize names of leadership candidates: poll

B.C. mulls plan to weaken DRIPA, in secret document shared with First Nations leaders

B.C. mulls plan to weaken DRIPA, in secret document shared with First Nations leaders
British Columbia Premier David Eby is considering amendments that would weaken the province's Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, after two recent court decisions siding with First Nations under the law's current wording.

B.C. mulls plan to weaken DRIPA, in secret document shared with First Nations leaders

Canada is losing more air traffic controllers than it's hiring: aviation expert

Canada is losing more air traffic controllers than it's hiring: aviation expert
An aviation expert says Canada is losing more air traffic controllers to retirement than it is hiring, despite efforts to ramp up recruitment.

Canada is losing more air traffic controllers than it's hiring: aviation expert

Canada is not planning to reopen embassy in Syria

Canada is not planning to reopen embassy in Syria
The federal government says it has no plans to reopen its embassy in Syria.

Canada is not planning to reopen embassy in Syria

Global Affairs laying off its most skilled diplomats, union says

Global Affairs laying off its most skilled diplomats, union says
The union representing staff at Global Affairs Canada says the foreign service is laying off dozens of its most skilled diplomats, while asking other envoys moving across continents to wait months for their personal items.

Global Affairs laying off its most skilled diplomats, union says

Air Canada crash probe being done in 'full co-operation' with U.S.: Carney

Air Canada crash probe being done in 'full co-operation' with U.S.: Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Ottawa is working in "full co-operation" with officials in the United States to probe the crash of an Air Canada jet at New York's LaGuardia Airport that killed two pilots Sunday night.

Air Canada crash probe being done in 'full co-operation' with U.S.: Carney