A look back on the 2022 B.C. wildfire season and what it can teach us about what's coming next - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 03:29 AM | Calgary | -1.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

A look back on the 2022 B.C. wildfire season and what it can teach us about what's coming next

A significant drought lengthened the 2022 B.C. wildfire season well into October, and one fire researcher says lengthy fire seasons could become the norm as firefighters gear up for 2023.

In 2022, wildfires in B.C. burned well into October, but there was far less destruction compared to 2021

Plumes of smoke rise from the end of a highway filled with firefighting vehicles.
The Keremeos Creek wildfire burns out of control near B.C.'s Highway 3A on Aug. 2, 2022. (Thomas Popyk/CBC)

A significant drought lengthened the 2022 B.C. wildfire season well into October, and one fire researcher says lengthy fire seasons could become the norm as firefighters gear up for 2023.

Even though the 2022 wildfire season was not nearly as destructive as past seasons, Robert Gray, a wildland fire ecologist, saysthe overallincreases in the length and intensity of our fire seasons showthe need for better emergency preparations.

After a slow start to the season, with cool and wet weather in the spring, fire activity spiked heading into August and September.

As British Columbians geared up for Halloween on Oct. 19, much of the province remained blanketed by smoke advisoriesand fires burned within Metro Vancouver.

Evacuation orders were issued across the province in the northeast B.C. community of Hudson's Hope, in the still-rebuilding community of Lytton in the southwestand near Keremeos, B.C. in the southeast.

The main reason for the heightened activity in the middle of the fall was a historic drought that left reservoirs at near-record-low levels.

Gray said he was very concerned about the impact of the long fire season on firefighting crews heading into 2023.

"What we're seeing in years like 2017, 2018, 2021, and even the latter part of 2022, is a very, very long deployment," he told CBC News. "It takes a really significant physical and emotional toll on firefighters.

"They have a shorter recovery time over the winter before they're right back at fire season in the springtime."

Taylor MacDonald, a fire information officer with the B.C. Wildfire Service, said in a statement that the service was actively recruiting ahead of next year's season.

"New records [were] set in late August and mid-October for the maximum number of fires detected per week, compared to the past 20 years," she said.

"Many areas of the province set temperature recordsand accumulated rainfall amounts through September that were below normal levels."

While the fire season was historic in its length, it was a significantly quieter season compared to the devastation of 2021.

MacDonald. said 2022 ranked as below-average when it comes to area burned, number of fires setand the number of human-caused fires.

"The 2022 fire season was characterized by above average lightning-caused fires and below average human-caused fires, resulting in the province experiencing one of the lowest human-caused wildfire seasons since 1950."

However, the number of fires across B.C. was more than in the historic 2017 season.

Crucially, however, many of these fires were smaller only around 11 per cent burned more than 0.05 square kilometres, according to MacDonald.

2023 could be worse

Gray saidthatmodelling showsclimate change is lengtheningthe fire season.

"What happened this year is, likely, an early warning of what's likely going to happen more frequently in the future. We need to be prepared for more frequent, long fire seasons, more heat domes, more situations like that."

In addition, Gray said modelling suggested next year would be an El Nino year.

Smoke rises from a wooded hilltop.
Smoke from a fire in Minnekhada Regional Park is pictured in Coquitlam, British Columbia, on Oct. 3. In 2022, many fires burned well into October, including in Metro Vancouver. A fire ecologist says it could be a sign of things to come. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

An El Nino is part of Earth's natural process, characterized by a warming in the Pacific Ocean with repercussions across the globe, including higher temperatures and greater precipitation in various regions.

Gray saidEl Nino years have translated to more aggressive fire behaviour in B.C.

He saidthe province should shore up its resources and have more firefighters on staff year-roundand also provide more targeted public safety advice for members of the public, including how to prevent fires and how to evacuate safely.

"It means everybody being a little bit more conscious of what's happening out there in the environment and being ready for it early."

With files from Nicole Mortillaro