Conserving water in Metro Vancouver still vital even with cooler, wetter summer ahead, experts say - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 12:20 AM | Calgary | -0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Conserving water in Metro Vancouver still vital even with cooler, wetter summer ahead, experts say

Although this summer is forecast to be cooler and wetter compared to 2021, experts say it's vital to conserve the water supply of Metro Vancouver, which is facing the increasing pressures of a growing population and a dwindling snowpack feeding reservoirs.

Dwindling snowpack, growing population adding to pressure on region's reservoirs

A overhead view of a person holding a hose watering plant beds and a green lawn.
Lawn-watering restrictions are in effect now through to October in Metro Vancouver. (Michelle Gagnon/CBC)

Although this summer in British Columbia is forecast to be cooler and wetter compared to 2021, experts say the need to conserve Metro Vancouver's water supplyis more important than ever.

While a cool, damp spring has made the recent introduction of lawn watering restrictionsappear unnecessary, such measures are required to preserve the region's water supply through to the end of summer.

Unlike last year, when adeadly, record-breaking heat domesettled over the province in June, the hottest time in 2022 is predicted to be mid-July to mid-August, according to Environment Canada when reservoir levels are much lower.

Datafrom 2015 to 2021 shows average water levels for the region during this period whenextreme heat canresult in water loss from reservoirs due to evaporation is 170 billion litres, compared to around 300 billion litres duringthe month of May.

It's an addedstrain on Metro Vancouver's water supply, which is already facing the increasing pressures of a growing population and a dwindling snowpack feeding reservoirs.

Snowpack depletion is accelerating, research shows

The snowpackis the seasonal accumulation of snow that feeds streams and rivers as it melts. For the Metro Vancouver region, the snowpackin the Coast Mountains which feeds the reservoirs ofCapilano, Seymour and Coquitlamlakes isa key source of drinking water.

As of Jan. 1,the province recorded above-normal amounts of snowpack, with the exception of the Okanagan, according tothe B.C. River Forecast Centre.

However, theamount has gone down drastically in the last few decades, says CBC meteorologist Johanna Wagstaffe.

"The amount of snow we get that is seasonal in this decade means something so much different than it looked in the'50sand '60s,"Wagstaffe said. "The baseline has already shifted."

This trend is reflected in research from the University of Northern British Columbia, which shows that B.C.'s snowpackwas depletingat a rate of 298billion tonnesper yearbetween 2015 and 2019 an accelerated rate from about 227 billion tonnesper year between 2000 and 2004.

"We have to get used to conserving water because this year is an anomaly," Wagstaffe said.

Population growth

Population growth is another big factor affecting the region's water supply, says John Richardson,a professor in the department of conservation sciences at the University of British Columbia.

According to Metro Vancouver planners, the region will be home to3.8 million peoplein 30 years'time, an increase of over one million residents from 2.7million in 2021.

But while the population is set to grow, there are no plans to build a new reservoir,Richardson says.

The Capilano Lake reservoir in summer 2015, when a Level 4 drought was announced for the Metro Vancouver region. (CBC)

Increasing the holding capacities of existing reservoirsor building a new one"comes with the loss of some amount of forest habitat and potential water quality issues," he said.

Malcolm Brodie, chair of Metro Vancouver's water committee, says the regional district hasthe option to source more water from Coquitlam Lake, the area's largest water reservoir.

In 2020, the region announced a $1-billion investment over the next seven years to buildnew infrastructure to double its ability to access, treat and distributethe lake's water supply.

According to the region's website, the project is undergoing permitting and regulatory processes, and constructionis set forthe late 2020s with completion slated forthe late 2030s.

New infrastructure designed to access, treat and distribute more water from Coquitlam Lake, pictured here, is slated for construction later this decade. (Instagram/Metro Vancouver)

But Brodie also says theneed for more water supply infrastructure is on the horizon. In the meantime, residents are being encouraged to do whatever they can to conserve water, even when it doesn't seem necessary in cooler, wetter weather.

"If we're wiser in the use of our water at this stage, when, you know, the pressure isn't on so much ...the people of the [water services department]believe thatthe new infrastructure that is going to be needed at some point can be delayed for a great period of time," Brodie said.

Simple ways to conserve water includewashing only full loads of laundry, thawing frozen goods in the refrigerator instead of running them under a tap, and fixing leaky toilets and taps.People with pools can lower the water level.

For gardeners grappling with watering restrictions,Richardson suggests planting more drought-resistant speciesand letting your grass go brown during the summer months.

"Grass becomes green again when the rains return.Grass is a very hardy plant," he said.


CBC British Columbia has launched aSurreybureauto helptell your stories with reporterKiran Singh. Story ideas and tips can be sent tokiran.singh@cbc.ca.