Wednesday, June 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Link shows COVID-19 load in Metro Vancouver water

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Mar, 2021 06:23 PM
  • Link shows COVID-19 load in Metro Vancouver water

A new online tool allows Metro Vancouver residents to track the viral load of COVID-19 found in untreated wastewater at each of the region’s five wastewater treatment plants.

Metro Vancouver, the regional district that delivers water, waste treatment and other services to the area's local governments, says the tool is now active on its website.

A statement from Metro Vancouver says it worked with the public health laboratory of the BC Centre for Disease Control and the University of British Columbia to sample and test wastewater to track the presence and trends of the COVID-19 virus.

Residents can click on a specific wastewater treatment plant on a map to see a snapshot of the COVID-19 virus trend for that area.

Metro Vancouver says tracking the viral load can help health authorities evaluate how well COVID-19 containment measures are working.

But they say it can't pinpoint the number of people who are infected or contagious.

The chart for each wastewater treatment plant shows the amount of COVID-19 virus present per litre of wastewater before the liquid is treated.

Dr. Natalie Prystajecky, program head of the public health lab at the BC Centre for Disease Control, says studying the virus in wastewater means researchers can "look at an entire population, rather than an individual person.”

“Studies have demonstrated that about 50 per cent of COVID-19 cases have the virus in their feces,” she says.

The virus that causes COVID-19 is non-infectious in feces and wastewater, the statement says.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey RCMP need your help with identifying an individual

Surrey RCMP need your help with identifying an individual
Surrey RCMP is releasing photos of an unidentified man who was seen in the area of a townhouse in the 2900-block of King George Boulevard on August 30, 2020.

Surrey RCMP need your help with identifying an individual

Vancouver Police need your help in finding missing woman

Vancouver Police need your help in finding missing woman
Ms. Poorman is Indigenous, 5’3” tall, 120 lbs and has black hair. She was last seen wearing a grey sweater, a black crop top, black jeans, and brown boots. She was carrying a beige purse.

Vancouver Police need your help in finding missing woman

Drug shows promise in 1st largely minority COVID-19 study

Drug shows promise in 1st largely minority COVID-19 study
It’s unclear how the results will be viewed; another drug that works in a similar way failed in an experiment rigorously testing it in COVID-19 patients but some less scientific, observational studies have suggested benefit.

Drug shows promise in 1st largely minority COVID-19 study

RCMP arrest two in clash over N.S. fishery

RCMP arrest two in clash over N.S. fishery
The Mounties said no one was injured at the wharf in Weymouth, and the two suspects were escorted from the scene. They were later released from custody and are expected to appear in court at a later date.

RCMP arrest two in clash over N.S. fishery

Provinces crack down as COVID cases soar

Provinces crack down as COVID cases soar
Canada's top public health official, Dr. Theresa Tam, said it's too soon to declare a second wave of the pandemic in the country, but daily case counts are increasing at an alarming rate.

Provinces crack down as COVID cases soar

Infectious diseases plunge amid COVID measures

Infectious diseases plunge amid COVID measures
While experts say delayed diagnoses likely contributed to the drop in reported cases, the numbers are nevertheless stark.

Infectious diseases plunge amid COVID measures