Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Warmer-Than-Average Summer Expected For B.C. Despite Waning El Nino

The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2016 12:50 PM
    VANCOUVER — A scrawny snowpack and a forecast of warmer-than-normal conditions has officials in British Columbia urging residents to use extra caution in preventing forest fires this summer.
     
    Eric Meyer of the BC Wildfire Service said fire conditions could become "very volatile" by the July long weekend as rains fizzle.
     
    "It's definitely going to start drying out," Meyer said Thursday during a conference call to discuss the snow pack and fire situation across B.C.
     
    "We're asking the public to be very cautious with any activities in the forest because it won't take much for a fire to get up and started and take off on them."
     
    Larger-than-average wildfires have consumed six times more land than normal in British Columbia so far this year, despite the actual number of blazes being no greater than usual, he said.
     
    Dave Campbell of the River Forecast Centre said the snow pack across the province is less than 15 per cent of its typical level for this time of year because of an unseasonably hot and dry early spring, which stretched from late March through to early May.
     
    "As of about the middle of May things have cooled down a bit and gotten more seasonal, and we've also gotten a few wet cycles as well," Campbell said.
     
     
    He linked the waning of El Nino over the past month with the return to more seasonable temperatures for this time of year.
     
    But the anticipated transition into La Nina isn't expected to bring significantly cooler and wetter conditions until the fall, Campbell added.
     
    As for river water levels, he said flows across the province at between a quarter and three-quarters of what is normal for this time of year.
     
    Environment Canada is predicting a hot summer, though precipitation remains an unknown factor, Campbell said.
     
    Valerie Cameron, a water stewardship manager with the forests ministry, described last year as "the most significant drought in recent memory."
     
    She said the province may have to enact some measures in the Water Regulation Act if conditions deteriorate beyond 2015 levels.
     
    "We're hoping for a better year than we had last year but we're preparing for the worst," Cameron said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Defence Tries To Poke Holes In DNA Evidence At Trial Of Travis Vader

    Defence Tries To Poke Holes In DNA Evidence At Trial Of Travis Vader
      Vashni Skipper testified Thursday that DNA matching Travis Vader's was found in four places in an SUV belonging to Lyle and Marie McCann.

    Defence Tries To Poke Holes In DNA Evidence At Trial Of Travis Vader

    Pharmacists Should Play 'Front-line' Role In Dispensing Cannabis: Association

    Pharmacists Should Play 'Front-line' Role In Dispensing Cannabis: Association
    TORONTO — A pharmacists' group that initially nixed the idea of dispensing medical cannabis has changed its stance, saying that pharmacists should play a "front-line role" in providing access to the drug.

    Pharmacists Should Play 'Front-line' Role In Dispensing Cannabis: Association

    Minister Likes MP's Proposal On Social Benefits From Infrastructure

    Minister Likes MP's Proposal On Social Benefits From Infrastructure
    The infrastructure minister is looking to take an idea from a rookie MP and require federally funded infrastructure projects to create social benefits on top of the economic spinoffs tied to billions in new spending.

    Minister Likes MP's Proposal On Social Benefits From Infrastructure

    Fortune Hunters Head To Nova Scotia As Chase The Ace Jackpot Brushes $2 Million

    Fortune Hunters Head To Nova Scotia As Chase The Ace Jackpot Brushes $2 Million
    SYDNEY, N.S. — A Chase the Ace jackpot worth nearly $2 million is expected to lure fortune hunters from across eastern Canada to Cape Breton this weekend.

    Fortune Hunters Head To Nova Scotia As Chase The Ace Jackpot Brushes $2 Million

    Rachel Notley, On TV, Urges Buy-in For Pipelines, Says Alberta's Fate Is Canada's Fate

    Rachel Notley, On TV, Urges Buy-in For Pipelines, Says Alberta's Fate Is Canada's Fate
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley used a provincewide TV address Thursday to deliver one of her strongest statements to date on the need for new pipelines, saying Alberta's fate is Canada's fate.

    Rachel Notley, On TV, Urges Buy-in For Pipelines, Says Alberta's Fate Is Canada's Fate

    Leadership Reviews Have Produced Dramatic Moments In Canadian Politics

    Leadership Reviews Have Produced Dramatic Moments In Canadian Politics
    Tom Mulcair, who faces a leadership review vote this weekend, would no doubt agree with Courtney that such a process "invites dissension."

    Leadership Reviews Have Produced Dramatic Moments In Canadian Politics