The Province

Satellite photos show B.C. rivers receding

Province may see unfamiliar drought conditions if summer is again hot and dry, expert says

- BRENNA OWEN

Parts of B.C. will likely enter unfamiliar territory with drought if they see another hot, dry summer, says the head of the province's River Forecast Centre.

Dave Campbell said persistent drought conditions in B.C. stretch back to 2022, so the province is heading into this summer with multi-year precipitat­ion deficits.

Satellite photograph­s show rivers in the Interior running narrower and shallower than the same time in 2023, which went on to be one of B.C.'s driest years on record.

With the average snowpack level lower than ever recorded in B.C., Campbell said he's expecting cumulative effects that could include water scarcity.

“We know these antecedent conditions that we're coming into this year are much more challengin­g than we started out last year with,” he said recently. “The concern obviously is if we get that hot, prolonged dry (period) that we've seen last year and the year before as well. If that continues this summer, then really we are on a path toward things that we haven't seen in recent memory.”

B.C. officials held a news conference Thursday to announce several new measures to help people prepare for drought, wildfires and other threats, including an online tool for household emergency planning, an updated drought informatio­n portal and upgrades to the B.C. Wildfire Service mobile app.

Nathan Cullen, minister of water, land and resource stewardshi­p, said the province is facing a “serious” situation with the potential for continued drought, and he asked people to take steps to reduce their consumptio­n to conserve water.

Emergency Management Minister Bowinn Ma said people often underestim­ate how their individual consumptio­n adds up. During the peak summer months, residents of Metro Vancouver consume between 1.5 billion and 1.8 billion litres of water each day.

“This is an extremely challengin­g amount to envision,” she said.

Ma said she recognizes there may be questions about large industrial users, but “nobody gets a free pass on this. Those companies, those industries, they are regulated, and they will be affected, if necessary, as well. … But we as individual­s, as households, we have a role to play,” she said.

The province also released its latest snowpack bulletin on Thursday, which says levels are “extremely low,” averaging 66 per cent of normal for this time of year.

Pockets of the Interior are especially dry. Campbell said he's most worried about the effects of drought on smaller rivers and creeks in the central Interior.

“Prince George, Quesnel, Williams Lake, Vanderhoof, that's kind of the hot spot, and then the other (area) that would be a concern would be up in the northeast,” he said.

Images provided by the Canadian Space Agency appear to show the effects of persistent drought in the Interior when compared with those taken last spring. An image taken last week by the European Space Agency's Sentinel-2 satellite shows the Quesnel River is narrower than in an image taken a year ago.

Forests Minister Bruce Ralston told Thursday's news conference that dry conditions and warm weather in the forecast will likely spur wildfire activity.

 ?? — THE EUROPEAN UNION, CANADIAN SPACE AGENCY/VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Side-by-side handout images, shown in infrared, taken by the European Space Agency's Sentinel-2 satellite, show the Quesnel River as it meets the Fraser River in Quesnel in May 2023, left, compared with May 2024.
— THE EUROPEAN UNION, CANADIAN SPACE AGENCY/VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS Side-by-side handout images, shown in infrared, taken by the European Space Agency's Sentinel-2 satellite, show the Quesnel River as it meets the Fraser River in Quesnel in May 2023, left, compared with May 2024.

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