Sunday, May 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2025 11:56 AM
  • Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau

The Insurance Bureau of Canada says it will be several weeks before the insured losses are added up for a severe weather and flooding event that deluged parts of southern B.C. 

A series of atmospheric river weather events last week led to overflows from the Nooksack River in Washington state that crossed the border into Abbotsford, forcing out hundreds, while further east the storms flooded homes and washed away roads. 

Aaron Sutherland, vice-president for the Insurance Bureau of Canada's Pacific region, says the storms come just four years after the devastating flooding of 2021 in the same area. 

He says recent event serves a "painful reminder of the need to build our resilience and better protect communities from the new weather reality we face," adding that insurers are working with Fraser Valley residents and farmers to process claims to get them back on their feet.

The City of Abbotsford lifted all of its evacuation alerts on Thursday, saying in a statement that it has moved from flood response to recovery as the waters of the Sumas and Nooksack rivers recede.

Environment Canada also lifted all weather alerts for the region, including special weather statements issued Thursday for strong winds over Metro Vancouver, Fraser Valley, and Howe Sound.

However, the weather office has issued a snowfall warning for the Coquihalla Highway between Hope and Merritt, saying a "series of low pressure systems" will bring up to 30 centimetres Friday, with an additional 15 centimetres possible on Saturday.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

MORE National ARTICLES

Pipeline agreement includes new target of 75 per cent cut in methane emissions

Pipeline agreement includes new target of 75 per cent cut in methane emissions
An agreement between Ottawa and Alberta that could clear the path for a new oil pipeline to the Pacific will also require a 75 per cent cut in methane emissions over the next decade, a source tells The Canadian Press.

Pipeline agreement includes new target of 75 per cent cut in methane emissions

Canada lifts the visa requirement for Qatari citizens

Canada lifts the visa requirement for Qatari citizens
The Honourable Lena Metlege Diab, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship today announced that Canada has lifted the visa requirement for citizens of Qatar. This change took effect this morning at 5:30 a.m. EST.

Canada lifts the visa requirement for Qatari citizens

B.C. launching review of post-secondary education in wake of declining stability

B.C. launching review of post-secondary education in wake of declining stability
British Columbia's public post-secondary institutions have seen a 70 per cent decline in international students, requiring the province to launch a review in a bid to stabilize the sector, the minister of post-secondary education said.

B.C. launching review of post-secondary education in wake of declining stability

Police clear protesters from Vancouver Island logging blockade

Police clear protesters from Vancouver Island logging blockade
Police say they have arrested four people during enforcement of a court injunction prohibiting anyone from blocking or interfering with forestry activities in the Carmanah Valley of southwestern Vancouver Island.

Police clear protesters from Vancouver Island logging blockade

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta
British Columbia "has to agree" on any pipeline from Alberta to the Pacific coast, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday, as his government edges closer to unveiling the details of a new energy pact it has been negotiating with Alberta.

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta

Trouble in 'Team Canada' as B.C.'s deputy premier raises spectre of pipeline lawsuit

Trouble in 'Team Canada' as B.C.'s deputy premier raises spectre of pipeline lawsuit
Rifts in "Team Canada" appear to be widening on the brink of a federal announcement on a potential pipeline from Alberta to the West Coast, with B.C.'s deputy premier even raising the prospect of legal action against the project.

Trouble in 'Team Canada' as B.C.'s deputy premier raises spectre of pipeline lawsuit