Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lightning raises wildfire fears in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2022 01:28 PM
  • Lightning raises wildfire fears in B.C.

VANCOUVER - Lightning strikes have peppered British Columbia's southern Interior, raising wildfire concerns as yet another day of heat warnings blanket most of the province and the wildfire risk jumps to high or extreme.

Environment Canada's lightning danger map shows dozens of strikes early Friday in the Kamloops, North Thompson, Shuswap and North Columbia regions, while the BC Wildfire Service map shows a handful of small fires sparked since midnight, although the cause of each fire is under investigation.

The weather office is calling for temperatures up to 40 degrees for many parts of the southern Interior and 14 daily maximum temperature records were broken Thursday.

The southern Okanagan community of Osoyoos reached 41.2 C, tying a record it set for the day in 1996 and edging the village of Lytton by one-tenth of a degree for hottest place in Canada.

The BC Wildfire Service says high temperatures around the wildfire burning out of control west of Lytton pushed the flames to the entrance of the Stein Valley Thursday, and increased fire activity is expected to continue as the hot, dry spell drags on.

The fire is now estimated to have charred nearly 27 square kilometres in the two weeks since it was discovered, but the wildfire service says rocky slopes and sparse fuels have slowed its growth and flames are not spreading further west into the Stein Valley.

As heat dries out the backcountry, the River Forecast Centre warns the conditions are also having an effect on B.C. waterways.

"Hot temperatures early this week have triggered significant snowpack and glacier melt at the high elevations of the Chilcotin Basin," the centre says in a statement posted Friday.

A flood watch has been issued for the Chilcotin region including the Chilcotin and Chilko rivers and their tributaries as the centre says flows are "slightly over the 10-year return period level and are expected to rise further into the weekend."

A flood watch is also in effect for the Lillooet River near Pemberton and high streamflow advisories cover waterways in the Sea-to-Sky region as well as the Upper Columbia in southeastern B.C., and the Nechako basin west of Prince George, although the centre says levels of rivers and streams there are falling.

MORE National ARTICLES

Convoy cost Ottawa $36.3M, memo says

Convoy cost Ottawa $36.3M, memo says
A memo to councillors released by the city says almost all of the $36.3-million bill is linked to policing the protest that clogged city streets by Parliament Hill in the downtown core.    

Convoy cost Ottawa $36.3M, memo says

Transit strike drags on in Sea-to-Sky corridor

Transit strike drags on in Sea-to-Sky corridor
Unifor Western Regional Director Gavin McGarrigle says in a statement that progress was being made during two days of negotiations before they ended late Thursday.

Transit strike drags on in Sea-to-Sky corridor

Charest says he won't change Canada's gun laws

Charest says he won't change Canada's gun laws
In a wide-ranging interview, he said that when it comes to gun control he believes the focus should be on stopping the flow of handguns coming into Canada from across the border. He pointed to the volume of shootings that have happened in Montreal and Toronto.

Charest says he won't change Canada's gun laws

Ontario students 'stable' after deadly Texas crash

Ontario students 'stable' after deadly Texas crash
Nine people were killed in the fiery Tuesday night crash and the two Canadians — Dayton Price, 19, of Mississauga, Ont., and Hayden Underhill, 20, of Amherstview, Ont. — suffered critical injuries.    

Ontario students 'stable' after deadly Texas crash

MPs told of confusion from crackdown on convoy

MPs told of confusion from crackdown on convoy
The government's use of the emergency powers in February included allowing financial institutions to freeze the accounts of those involved in the protests that occupied streets in downtown Ottawa and blocked key border crossings.    

MPs told of confusion from crackdown on convoy

Canada working on national flood insurance program

Canada working on national flood insurance program
On Monday, federal Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair finished a tour of B.C. communities that experienced devastating floods last November, including Abbotsford and Merritt, where some people still have not been able to move home.

Canada working on national flood insurance program