Thursday, May 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Power knocked out to thousands of customers as strong winds swept through B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Dec, 2025 11:54 AM
  • Power knocked out to thousands of customers as strong winds swept through B.C.

Thousands of people across British Columbia lost power overnight as strong winds swept across the province, generating gusts in excess of 100 kilometres an hour in some communities.

BC Hydro says in a statement that power was knocked out by the overnight wind storm for about 120,000 customers, although it was gradually being restored. 

The utility says that more than 18,000 were without electricity in Surrey, while Vancouver, Port Coquitlam, Burnaby, Maple Ridge and North Vancouver all saw more than 10,000 customers affected.

The outages come after Environment Canada issued a special weather statement for the Vancouver area that has since ended, warning of strong wind gusts.

The forecaster says maximum gusts overnight reached 102 km/h at both Point Atkinson in West Vancouver and in Hope, with Vancouver International Airport reporting wind speeds up to 76 kilometres.

BC Hydro says "all available crews and contractors have been mobilized" to restore power after winds brought trees and debris onto its infrastructure, mostly in the Lower Mainland.

Without lights, some schools across Metro Vancouver and the rest of B.C. were forced to cancel classes for the day, including all schools in Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows as well as some in Langley, Abbotsford, Kootenay-Columbia and Kootenay Lake.

Strong winds remain in the forecast for the southern Interior, including the Thompson, Cariboo, Okanagan, Shuswap, Chilcotin, Similkameen and Kootenay regions.

Environment Canada says the wind storm comes on the heels of a cold front that moved through the area, bringing heavy rain and major flood warnings in the Fraser Valley. 

The agency says the same system carried heavy rainfall in parts of the Lower Mainland, with Coquitlam getting more than 70 millimetres, Rocky Point Park in Port Moody receiving almost 64 millimetres and Maple Ridge, Agassiz, Burnaby, and Chilliwack all reporting in excess of 50 millimetres of rain.

Environment Canada says the weather woes continue in the Interior, where a number of highways have been affected by heavy snowfall or winter storm conditions.

Winter storm warnings have been posted for Highway 1 from Sicamous to Golden and Highway 3 from Grand Forks to Creston where up to 30 centimetres of snow is expected.

The DriveBC information system says the Coquihalla Highway from Hope to Merritt has been closed due to a vehicle incident, while Highway 3 from Hope to Princeton remains closed because of damage from last week's rainstorms. 

Both stretches of highways are also under snowfall warnings, where another 15 centimetres of snow is expected on top of the 30 centimetres that has already fallen.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Premiers Smith and Eby condemn assassination of American activist Charlie Kirk

Premiers Smith and Eby condemn assassination of American activist Charlie Kirk
Smith says the shooting should be condemned across the political spectrum, while Eby says it's a chance to reflect on the importance of a peaceful political culture.

Premiers Smith and Eby condemn assassination of American activist Charlie Kirk

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says
On Thursday, Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the government's new major projects office will work to speed up engineering and regulatory work on the Alto high-speed rail line. 

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop
While many audience members pushed back on the province's six proposals with the aim of taking greater control over immigration, policing, taxation and other issues, the crowd joined past town halls by overwhelmingly supporting the ideas in straw polls.

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection
The provincial government said it took the preventive measure after a Lion electric school bus caught fire in Montreal earlier this week.

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection

Canada Post union to lift overtime ban, stop delivering flyers

Canada Post union to lift overtime ban, stop delivering flyers
CUPW president Jan Simpson is calling on Canada Post to get back to the bargaining table in hopes of wrapping up the ongoing dispute before the holiday season.

Canada Post union to lift overtime ban, stop delivering flyers

Surrey celebrates National Tree Day with hands-on tree planting to grow its urban forest

Surrey celebrates National Tree Day with hands-on tree planting to grow its urban forest
For more than 30 years, Releaf volunteers have planted thousands of trees and shrubs each year in Surrey’s parks, restoring natural areas, improving air quality, creating wildlife habitat and strengthening local biodiversity.

Surrey celebrates National Tree Day with hands-on tree planting to grow its urban forest