'Widespread' amounts of cocaine, painkillers found in fish habitat on Sumas Prairie after 2021 floods: study - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 03:55 AM | Calgary | -1.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British ColumbiaVideo

'Widespread' amounts of cocaine, painkillers found in fish habitat on Sumas Prairie after 2021 floods: study

Fish habitat in the lower Fraser Valley was found to have an "astounding" amount of contaminants after extreme flooding last fall, according to a new study.

Excessive metals, pesticides, fecal bacteria also found in samples, Raincoast Conservation report says

Staff with the Raincoast Conservation Foundation took samples of water in the former Sumas Lake area in Abbotsford, B.C., over a seven-week period after the floods in November 2021. (Supplied by Alex Harris/Raincoast Conservation Foundation)

Fish habitat in the lower Fraser Valley was found to have an "astounding" amount of contaminants after extreme flooding last fall, according to a new study.

The RaincoastConservation Foundation said excessive nutrients, metals, fecal bacteria, hydrocarbonsand pesticides as well as cocaine and painkillers were detected in 29 surface water samples from the Sumas Prairie in Abbotsford, B.C., over a seven-week period after the flood.

"This is a red flag saying these waters are unsafe for salmon and unsafe for fish," saidPeter Ross, a toxicologist andthe report's lead author, speaking Thursday morning on The Early Edition.

In a statement released with the findings the same day, the foundation said the degradation in the health of Sumas fish habitat became clear during this research.

Raincoast said its analysis of water in fish habitatfound"excessive nutrients, metals, hydrocarbons and pesticides" were the primary pollutants of concern.

It also saidcocaine and painkillers were found in its samples, which were taken from 11 sites between December 2021 and February 2022. Ross puts these contaminants in a category he calledpharmaceuticals and personal care products and said cocaine dominated it.

"We found cocaine to be the most widespread contaminant in this category," said Ross. "The concentrations were not very high, but ... it was everywhere."

The Raincoast Conservation Foundation collected water samples from 11 sites in Sumas Prairie between Dec. 15, 2021 and Feb. 2, 2022. The area in blue shows the location of Sumas Lake before it was drained in the 1920s. (Supplied by the Raincoast Conservation Foundation)

The study was supported by a number of groupsincluding the Sumas First Nation,Fisheries and Oceans Canadaand B.C.'s Ministry of Environment.

The foundation noted waterquality in the Sumas Prairie formerly Sumas Lake, before the area was drained in the 1920s is "poor, regardless of flooding, having been degraded by agricultural and domestic activities."

A lack of historical datamakes it difficult to knowhow much contamination wasa direct result of the flood and how much was a pre-existing problem, it added.

Residents were warned to stay out of the icy, murky floodwater that swamped the area last November. Officials warned debrislike oil, garbage, jerry cans and dead animals were polluting the water.

Soil quality 'not compromised': ministry

Muchof B.C.'s food production happens in the Sumas Prairie, a low-lying part of the Fraser Valley about 90 kilometres east of Vancouver. The areais irresistible to some of the largest agriculture operations in the province forseveral reasons: thefields are flat, there's a temperate climate year-round and it's close to the big city.

The soil is strong, too.

The fact the prairie was formerly a shallow lake makes its soil sandy at the former lake's edge and clay-like towardits centre especially nutrient-rich and suitable fordozens of varieties ofvegetables andberries, as well as livestock.

WATCH |The 100-year-old decision that contributed to Abbotsford flooding:

The 100-year-old decision that contributed to Abbotsford, B.C., flooding

3 years ago
Duration 2:29
More than 100 years ago, a lake outside what is now the Abbotsford, B.C., area was drained to create lucrative farmland. Many say that decision is a big contributor to the devastating flooding.

After the flood, the B.C. Ministry of Agricultureconducted apreliminary evaluation of soil quality to determine whether the area would still be viable for farming.

Roughly two dozen soil samples were analyzed for contaminants like gas, diesel, pesticides, herbicides and asbestos.

"After reviewing the soil quality results, it was determined the sampled agriculture lands were not compromised during the flooding and the integrity of the agricultural food supply production for this area remains strong," read a statement.

An image of Sumas Lake before it was drained to make way for farmland. (City of Vancouver Archives)

Ross said the report reveals a collective failure to protect water and fish habitat from contamination. He wantsthese findings to contribute to "innovation, stewardship and collective investment in green infrastructure" that will protect people, communities, and fish habitat.

"What we would hope is that Sumas First Nation and other organizations and agencies will look to this report and use those conclusions, use our findings to try to design abetter way of living with water during a time of changing climate," he said.

Sumas First Nation Chief Dalton Silver described the findingsof the report as "alarming," and raised concerns about the state of the nearby waterways that salmon return to.

"There's a big worry about the health of the salmon, of wildlife in general," he said.

"If the environment is ailing around you, you need to look after yourself a little bit better."

CBC News has contacted the Ministry of Agriculture to clarify the discrepancy between its soil findings and the water findingsin the foundation's report.

In a statement, the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy said it is carefully reviewing the report'sfindings.

With files from The Early Edition and On The Coast

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The environment is changing. This newsletter is your weekly guide to what were doing about it.

...

The next issue of What on Earth will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.