Medicine Hat News

B.C. snowpack about 40% below normal, as Eby worries of ‘dramatic drought conditions’

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Aaron Hill, executive director of the Watershed Watch Salmon Society in B.C., can’t recall when he was so concerned about the snowpack levels in the province.

“We could get lucky and have a nice wet, rainy spring and summer and it could take a lot of the sting out of this, but if it’s not, then we’re in trouble,” he said.

Hill is not the only one worrying. The province’s latest snow bulletin shows British Columbia’s average snowpack is almost 40 per cent lower than normal, raising concerns about what Premier David Eby called “some of the most dramatic drought conditions that have been seen in our lifetime.”

The bulletin issued Thursday says levels remain “very low” at 61 per cent of normal.

That’s substantia­lly worse than this time last year, when the snowpack was 79 per cent of normal.

B.C. went on to experience deep and prolonged drought after a record-breaking heat wave in May spurred rapid melting and drying. Then came the devastatin­g fire season, which scorched more than 28,000 square kilometres of land.

Thursday’s bulletin says the low snowpack combined with warm seasonal forecasts and “lingering impacts” from the previous drought are creating “significan­tly elevated drought hazards” for the coming spring and summer.

The snowpack is especially sparse across the South Coast, ranging from 30 per cent of normal on Vancouver Island to 47 per cent in the Lower Fraser region.

The bulletin shows the Stikine region in northweste­rn B.C. has the highest snowpack in the province at 90 per cent of the average.

The conditions and forecast are concerning, the premier said.

“Knowing that water levels behind dams for (hydro power) are low, knowing that farmers didn’t have enough water to grow feed for their cattle (last) summer, knowing the forest fire impacts we’ve seen, I am really worried about the summer that’s coming up,” Eby told an unrelated news conference on Thursday.

The only thing that “eclipses” his concern about drought is watching atmospheri­c rivers of rain sweep over California, causing landslides and flooding that have killed several people, he said, a reminder of B.C.’s devastatin­g flooding in fall 2021.

Eby said it felt like the extreme weather B.C. is experienci­ng is an “early warning sign for the rest of Canada about what’s coming with climate change.”

Close to 100 wildfires continue to smoulder in the province, holdovers from last year’s record-breaking fire season, he added.

“This marks the year when I learned that fires can actually burn underneath snow, I didn’t know that was a thing.”

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