Vancouver Sun

Elephant Hill fire caused yearly losses of up to $1B, Indigenous report finds

- BRIEANNA CHARLEBOIS

A report into a massive wildfire nearly six years ago that destroyed more than 100 homes and scorched a vast swath of British Columbia's Interior says the blaze resulted in up to $1 billion a year in continuing nature and ecosystem losses.

The Elephant Hill wildfire burned more than 1,900 square kilometres of forests, grasslands and properties in the summer of 2017, directly affecting numerous First Nations and other communitie­s.

The report was released last week by the Secwépemcu­l'ecw Restoratio­n and Stewardshi­p Society, based in Kamloops, B.C. The society was founded by eight Secwépemc communitie­s directly affected by the Elephant Hill wildfire and has been working to pursue landscape recovery and restoratio­n throughout their territorie­s.

Susan Todd, president of consulting firm Solstice Sustainabi­lity Works Inc., led a research team that worked with the society to prepare the report.

Todd, who's a chartered profession­al accountant and has a master's degree in environmen­tal management, said people may be uncomforta­ble attaching a monetary value to the environmen­t and resources, but if “we don't count them, they are effectivel­y valued at zero.”

“We just need to make sure that we don't take nature services for granted. When something seems free, then you tend to overuse it or you tend to use it badly,” she said.

The economic analysis shows how resources, including wild food, timber, regulation of clean water supply and clean air, as well culture and well-being services, were affected by the fire.

The research estimated a range that varied widely for some resources. For instance, it determined the lost value in regulating water and stabilizin­g soils to mitigate floods and landslides was between $58 million and $101 million per year.

Similarly, the lost value of culture, well-being and education services ranged from about $2.6 million to $26.7 million per year, depending on the frequency of such activities.

The costliest single item, water purificati­on, was assigned a value of $433.5 million.

The analysis also estimated separate one-time losses, dominated by carbon storage loss from the burning of trees and soil valued at $1.57 billion to $1.58 billion.

The lost carbon absorption of the burned ecosystem was assigned an annual value of $15.2 million to $366.1 million.

The report says assigning dollar values have limitation­s, but should still be used as a “tool for ensuring that nature's services do not get undervalue­d in decision-making.”

Todd also noted the data was collected in 2021 and does not account for inflation since then.

The report highlights the need for greater investment in Indigenous-led restoratio­n of fire affected areas, she said.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? The Elephant Hill wildfire burns in the distance near Clinton, as seen from behind a mountain on Kamloops Lake in Savona, in July of 2017.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES The Elephant Hill wildfire burns in the distance near Clinton, as seen from behind a mountain on Kamloops Lake in Savona, in July of 2017.

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