Lethbridge Herald

B.C. dealing with drought

LOW RIVER FLOWS MORE LIKELY THIS SUMMER

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — VANCOUVER

Drought forecasts from Agricultur­e Canada show most of British Columbia is abnormally dry or enduring some level of drought, similar to dry conditions that are being experience­d across a swath of Western Canada.

Snowpack levels in B.C. recorded on May 15 were similar to those in 2015 and 2016 and the B.C. River Forecast Centre says they are among the lowest in the last 40 years.

It also says diminished snowpacks and early snow melt due to a warm spring increase the likelihood of low flows in rivers and streams across the province this summer.

As much as 60 per cent of the snowpack has already melted at most sites, compared to no more than 25 per cent during a usual season, and in areas where the snow is gone, such as northeast B.C., data shows river flows are already ebbing to “below normal.”

A drought map published by Agricultur­e Canada on April 30 showed abnormally dry conditions in parts of southern Manitoba and Saskatchew­an, as well as in southern and northwest Alberta including where the Chuckegg Creek fire was burning out of control near High Level.

Rain in May and June will help in B.C., but the river centre says seasonal forecasts from Environmen­t Canada predict above-normal temperatur­es in late spring and early summer across western B.C., and there is no sign of cooler, wetter weather in other regions.

Agricultur­e Canada’s drought map showed patches of severe drought surroundin­g Terrace and along the Alaska Panhandle. There were moderate drought conditions in effect across Haida Gwaii, large sections of Vancouver Island and most of northeaste­rn and southern B.C.

Low snowpacks and existing dry conditions similar to 2015 and 2016 raise concerns about drought or wildfires but Dave Campbell of the river forecast centre says everything depends on conditions over the next several weeks.

“The rain can make up the difference and we’ve seen that in 2015 when we saw these really low snowpacks but a fairly wet summer, and that was able to make up the difference,” he says.

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