Vancouver Sun

Lives and billions of dollars at stake in debate over watershed science in B.C.

- BRENNA OWEN

Ross Muirhead stood at the edge of a forestry cut blockfille­d with stumps, rain pelting down as he watched water rushing over the barren ground.

The environmen­tal advocate was storm-watching during the atmospheri­c river disaster that swamped southweste­rn B.C. in November 2021.

Muirhead says that without a healthy forest to help absorb the excess water, it was gushing toward a creek near the Sunshine Coast community of Halfmoon Bay.

“It was just complete surface run-off,” he says.

Muirhead went to see what was happening near the outlet of the creek and found highway crews already working — water and debris had caused a “complete engineerin­g failure” of a culvert and the road on top of it, he says.

It was one of at least six washouts along a 40-kilometre stretch between Halfmoon Bay and Gibsons, says Muirhead, who lives in neighbouri­ng Roberts Creek. He's the founder of the group Elphinston­e Logging Focus, named after the local mountain.

“These culverts are undersized for climate-change conditions, with atmospheri­c river events,” he says. “All across the Sunshine Coast, the majority of them were designed and put in place in the 1950s, when the highway was engineered.”

Now, Muirhead says he's worried about plans for additional logging on the slopes of Mount Elphinston­e, about half an hour's drive north of his home.

Scientists say the stakes in getting it right are huge, with lives and billions of dollars hanging in the balance during climate-related extremes in a province where clear-cutting has been a dominant practice for decades, affecting large swaths of the landscape.

The province's logging agency, B.C. Timber Sales, was set to decide by the end of this month whether the Mount Elphinston­e harvesting rights will be put up for auction in April.

The agency reduced the potential area available for logging to a total of 13 hectares over two cut blocks following a watershed assessment last year, and says it has committed to harvesting only half of what the Mount Elphinston­e area can “sustainabl­y support.”

A public informatio­n bulletin says the method would be “partial cutting,” with 500 trees left standing in addition to substantia­l patches set aside for wildlife and reserves.

But Muirhead is still concerned about the effects of more harvesting and the extension of logging roads on a landscape that he describes as “dying from a thousand cuts” sustained over more than a century of developmen­t.

The board of the Sunshine Coast Regional District wrote a letter to provincial officials last month asking for the cut blocks to be removed from the B.C. Timber Sales operating plan. It also requested further hydrologic­al studies to evaluate the potential effects of logging on properties downstream.

The agenda for the board's meeting in March includes a reply from Pierre Aubin, a profession­al forester with B.C. Timber Sales on the Sunshine Coast. His letter says the agency is implementi­ng all of the recommenda­tions from the existing watershed assessment completed by the consulting company Polar Geoscience.

The study did reveal infrastruc­ture that was “potentiall­y undersized in light of climate change projection­s,” including crossings on “urban” roads, Aubin says in the letter dated Feb. 22.

The informatio­n has been shared with that ministry, he adds.

Aging or undersized infrastruc­ture is part of the problem. But Muirhead and others suspect another challenge may be looming over B.C.'s watersheds — scientific methods that underestim­ate the role of industrial logging in elevating flood risk.

`THE POWER FOREST'

OF THE

A recent peer-reviewed study led by researcher­s at the University of B.C. says “determinis­tic methods,” which are long-standing and widely used, result in projection­s that don't reflect the true risk of flooding after logging. Determinis­tic modelling makes projection­s based on a set of factual inputs and is not designed to consider randomness or chance, the study says.

It says this traditiona­l method leads to results that are “diametrica­lly opposite” to the alternativ­e approach that the study's authors advocate.

Commonly used in other scientific discipline­s, their preferred approach is known as “probabilis­tic” modelling, and the paper says it forecasts “larger effects” on flooding.

The study published in the journal Science of the Total Environmen­t aims to guide the introducti­on of probabilit­y to forest hydrology in B.C., the authors say.

It's the latest volley in the debate about the use of probabilis­tic versus determinis­tic methodolog­ies in forest hydrology that's been playing out for years.

But study co-author Younes Alila, a professor in the forestry department at the University of B.C., says the significan­ce of the debate is more than just academic.

The scientific methods behind watershed assessment­s inform the design of dikes, bridges, and highways, with safety and cost implicatio­ns for infrastruc­ture built in a way that doesn't reflect the risks, says Alila, who is also a profession­al engineer.

Alila has been calling for a shift away from determinis­tic methods in forest hydrology for two decades, saying they represent “the science of convenienc­e.”

“It's the only way they could justify the way they're logging in the form of clear cuts.”

By contrast, Alila says probabilis­tic modelling takes into account the random nature of the forces influencin­g flooding, a complex interplay he calls “the power of the forest,” and produces projection­s about the likely severity and frequency.

Alila says determinis­tic methods aren't designed to draw conclusion­s about the frequency of extremes and tend to underestim­ate the effects of industrial logging.

It's crucial to consider frequency because dikes and bridges can fail when battered by peak flows that are happening more often, he says, even if the rushing water doesn't exceed the maximum capacity of the infrastruc­ture.

He says frequency is the “lost dimension” in B.C. forest hydrology.

“What drives me is not conservati­on ... What drives me is the science, period.”

On the Sunshine Coast, Muirhead's group hired Alila to review the assessment commission­ed by B.C. Timber Sales to inform how much more harvesting should be allowed on Mount Elphinston­e.

The logging agency has described the existing study by Polar Geoscience as “one of the most comprehens­ive produced for the industry.”

Polar Geoscience, says the study was “conducted at a higher level of detail than is normally practised” in B.C. given the proximity to residentia­l areas. It provided its recommenda­tions “with the specific objective of minimizing risk” and incorporat­ed “a degree of conservati­sm” beyond that of previous studies in the area, the company says in a response posted to a B.C. government web page.

However, Alila says the study took a determinis­tic approach that underestim­ates the risk posed by additional logging. In particular, he says the study employed “equivalent clearcut area,” or ECA, a common measure depicting the hydrologic­al impact of forest disturbanc­es such as logging or wildfire.

For instance, logging with an ECA of 10 hectares would have the same impact as clear-cutting that amount of forest. ECA — which can also be expressed as a percentage of the originally logged area — can fall over time, as forests regrow and recover hydrologic­al function.

A provincial informatio­n bulletin says forest losses may cause detectable increases in peak water flows if ECA is higher than 20 per cent.

Polar suggested that threshold for the Mount Elphinston­e area, and B.C. Timber Sales says it has incorporat­ed the company's recommenda­tions.

Still, Polar's report shows ECA already exceeds 20 per cent for several specific points of interest identified through the assessment.

Alila, meanwhile, says ECA's determinis­tic methodolog­y ignores the broader power of the forest, instead taking data from smaller stands of trees and using it to draw conclusion­s about larger areas.

A forest's influence on flooding stems from the many random or “chancy” features in a watershed, he says. That includes the overarchin­g climate and physical characteri­stics such as mountains, rivers, soils, elevation and more, Alila says.

Only a “probabilis­tic” approach can unravel those relationsh­ips to reveal how “super-sensitive” B.C.'s watersheds are to the cumulative effects of forest loss, he says.

“Of course, if there is global warming, that law of chance is going to be intensifie­d because we're going to see more frequent floods.”

The response from Polar Geoscience last November says many of the professor's criticisms are “unfounded and flawed or focus on the hypothetic­al.”

The company says its findings and recommenda­tions were based on many considerat­ions in addition to ECA and Alila's claim that the assessment was “microscale” in scope is a mischaract­erization.

Using a probabilis­tic framework “could be a useful approach for a portion of our assessment,” and Polar is testing such methods, the response says, calling the models “promising.” But it isn't yet practical, reliable or cost effective, due in part to a lack of streamflow data to support the modelling, it says.

Polar says its approach aligns with guidelines released by the Associatio­n of B.C. Forest Profession­als and Engineers & Geoscienti­sts British Columbia in 2020.

`THEY DON'T WANT COMPLICATE­D METHODS'

Martin Carver, a registered profession­al engineer and geoscienti­st who previously worked as a hydrologis­t for the B.C. government, says determinis­tic methods are “deeply rooted” in forest hydrology in the province and beyond.

“There is a discussion happening in the peer-reviewed literature now, between the two camps,” he says, referring to determinis­tic and probabilis­tic approaches.

But outside forest hydrology, probabilis­tic work is “common or the norm,” he says, pointing to climatolog­y, meteorolog­y and other areas of hydrology.

“It's not just coming out of nowhere ... But for some reason, which is kind of a good question, it's not been present in forest hydrology practice in British Columbia.”

When asked why that's the case, he says determinis­tic methods are simple for those managing forests.

“They like simple methods to manage. They don't want complicate­d methods, even though the system they're managing is complex,” he says. “And those simplified methods that are all over the place in British Columbia, and have been around for quite a while, are problemati­c.”

But worsening climate change is shining a spotlight on “gaps” in the science of forest hydrology, especially around extremes such as flooding, he says. The past can no longer serve as a reliable estimate of the future, Carver says.

Climate-related extremes are getting worse and they're happening more often, he says, raising the consequenc­es of any limitation­s in the science used to predict and respond to the risks.

In B.C. and across Canada, the costs of climate-related disasters are adding up.

Ottawa's expected disaster assistance funding to help B.C. rebuild after flooding and landslides in 2021 that claimed five lives has surpassed $3 billion, a fraction of the total price tag, while the B.C. government says its expenses this year will be $996 million higher than expected after responding to the worst wildfire season in the province's history.

The results of watershed assessment­s aren't typically shared with the public in B.C., Carver notes. They belong to the companies that produce or commission them.

Carver did not specifical­ly review the Mount Elphinston­e watershed assessment or Alila's review of the study before speaking with The Canadian Press.

But he says a probabilis­tic approach is necessary to assess the risk of post-logging extremes once a watershed reaches a certain size or complexity.

“When our systems get larger, both in terms of the size of the watershed, or the events get larger ... you cannot do that analysis determinis­tically anymore,” he says.

“You no longer know how the complex of processes are interactin­g, overlaying, competing, compensati­ng, right? All of those things are happening and yielding an outcome. But we do know from the frequency analysis that as remarkable as nature always is to us, a pattern emerges in the frequency distributi­on.”

Alila and Carver say the B.C. government has no set prescripti­ons for how exactly watershed risk assessment­s should be conducted before forest harvesting.

Instead, B.C. has been using a system known as profession­al reliance to manage forestry and other resources industries since the early 2000s. It's up to engineers, geoscienti­sts and other profession­als to decide how to assess risks.

Carver is one of the primary authors of the profession­al guidelines that Polar Geoscience says it adhered to with its study.

In its response last fall, Polar says Alila should approach the profession­al groups if he believes the guidelines require revision.

Carver says he believes there's a growing recognitio­n of the difference­s between approaches among experts in B.C. But he says the province is “lagging behind” when it comes to incorporat­ing the science.

And as climate extremes become more frequent, he says, assessing the risks incorrectl­y could lead to greater damages and losses of life.

Those simplified methods that are all over the place in British Columbia, and have been around for quite a while, are problemati­c.”

 ?? ROSS MUIRHEAD/HANDOUT VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A debris flow near Sechelt in 2021. Elphinston­e Logging Focus founder Ross Muirhead says culverts in southweste­rn B.C. are too small for events like atmospheri­c rivers.
ROSS MUIRHEAD/HANDOUT VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS A debris flow near Sechelt in 2021. Elphinston­e Logging Focus founder Ross Muirhead says culverts in southweste­rn B.C. are too small for events like atmospheri­c rivers.
 ?? DARRYL DYCK /THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? In March 2022, trucks haul loads of rock on a section of Highway 8 along the Nicola River that had to be rebuilt after it was washed away during flooding in November 2021 on the Shackan Indian Band, northwest of Merritt.
DARRYL DYCK /THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES In March 2022, trucks haul loads of rock on a section of Highway 8 along the Nicola River that had to be rebuilt after it was washed away during flooding in November 2021 on the Shackan Indian Band, northwest of Merritt.
 ?? JASON PAYNE/FILES ?? Chilliwack resident Trevor Carne surveys the flood damage to Watt Creek at the Maple Bay campground at Cultus Lake in January 2022. The damage was caused by flooding the previous November.
JASON PAYNE/FILES Chilliwack resident Trevor Carne surveys the flood damage to Watt Creek at the Maple Bay campground at Cultus Lake in January 2022. The damage was caused by flooding the previous November.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada