Saturday, June 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Response to wildfires 'unsustainable': report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2021 01:59 PM
  • Response to wildfires 'unsustainable': report

A team of scientists from British Columbia, the United States and Spain say Western Canada must address the threats posed by highly destructive wildfires or face deadly consequences.

The scientists, including Mathieu Bourbonnais, assistant professor of earth and environmental sciences at the University of British Columbia Okanagan, predict devastating wildfires such as those currently burning in B.C. and elsewhere in the country will be commonplace by 2050.

The group has released a paper predicting billions of dollars in suppression and indirect fire costs as well as hundreds or thousands of premature deaths due to exposure to wildfire smoke if climate change and fire causes are not resolved.

The warning comes as statistics from the B.C. government show 1,251 wildfires have charred more than 4,500 square kilometres of bush since the start of the fire season on April 1.

Three dozen of those blazes are considered extremely threatening or highly visible and include the 395 square kilometre fire southwest of 100 Mile House that remains out of control and prompted an evacuation alert for another 161 properties on Wednesday.

Environment Canada has issued heat warnings or special weather statements for inland sections of the north and central coasts and much of southern B.C., as the BC Wildfire Service warns the combination of high temperatures and low relative humidity will make wildfires even more intense.

Bourbonnais, who spent years working as a wildland firefighter, says in a statement that a new long-term plan is needed because it's simplistic and insufficient to blame the wildfire crisis on the forest sector or wildland fire management agencies.

"Wildfires affect so many facets of our society and environment including health, the economy, biodiversity, ecosystem function and more," he says in the release.

"Wildland fire management must engage additional proponents, including Indigenous Peoples, industry and communities, to help people learn to live with the realities of landscapes and ecological systems that include wildfires but, over time, work to reduce their more catastrophic effects."

The economic and social costs of wildfire response are unsustainable, the scientists argue.

MORE National ARTICLES

Export, investment to spur B.C. growth: Central 1

Export, investment to spur B.C. growth: Central 1
The Vancouver-based firm predicts growth of 4.2 per cent this year, 4.5 per cent in 2022 and just below three per cent in 2023.

Export, investment to spur B.C. growth: Central 1

2 COVID19 deaths for Wednesday

2 COVID19 deaths for Wednesday
There are 108 new cases of COVID-19 in Vancouver Coastal, 259 new cases in Fraser, 35 in Island, 30 in Interior, 20 in Northern and four new cases of people who reside outside of Canada.

2 COVID19 deaths for Wednesday

Police seek information to assist hit and run investigation

Police seek information to assist hit and run investigation
A woman had been walking on the sidewalk when she was struck from behind by a vehicle that had driven on to the sidewalk.

Police seek information to assist hit and run investigation

Vaccinate essential workers earlier: B.C. experts

Vaccinate essential workers earlier: B.C. experts
The third phase of B.C.'s immunization campaign is set to start in April and last until June, reaching people between the ages of 60 and 79, along with those who are highly clinically vulnerable, such as cancer patients.

Vaccinate essential workers earlier: B.C. experts

Migrant workers must get COVID-19 shots: advocates

Migrant workers must get COVID-19 shots: advocates
An estimated 1.6 million people in Canada don't have permanent resident status and many work in essential jobs in health care, construction and agriculture, the group said.

Migrant workers must get COVID-19 shots: advocates

Canada welcomes first COVAX vaccine in Africa

Canada welcomes first COVAX vaccine in Africa
Some 600,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine arrived in the West African country of Ghana on Wednesday, months after the rollout of vaccines in Canada and the rest of the developed world, which has underscored the inequity COVAX was seeking to avoid.

Canada welcomes first COVAX vaccine in Africa