Listen Live

Record-breaking heat elevates fire risk on Vancouver Island, Sunshine Coast

We’re on the tail end of a spring heatwave for the ages.

A ridge of high pressure that brought warm, dry air to the region was behind the sampling of mid-July weather.

 In Duncan, heat records fell over a four-day stretch from April 14th to 17th. It really sizzled on Friday and Saturday, when Environment Canada recorded daily highs of 24 C and 24.7 C, respectively.

Environment Canada Meteorologist, Lisa Erven, says this wasn’t your run-of-the-mill stretch of mild weather.

“When daily temperature records are broken, sometimes we only see them being broken by point-five degrees or a degree,” Erven said. “This actually brought temperatures that broke records by two, three, or even four degrees.”

The stretch of summer-like conditions elevated the fire danger risk from low to moderate across the Mid and North Island and on the Sunshine Coast.

Moderate means forest fuels are drying and there is an increased risk of surface fires starting. 

For those who wouldn’t mind seeing some cooler weather and rain enter into the picture, we’ll be seeing the ridge of high pressure weaken as the week goes on.

Erven says that we’ll stay “three-to-five degrees above normal,” over the next two or three days before a somewhat dramatic shift in the weather pattern.

“So instead of having a ridge of high pressure parked over the province, that ridge is going to slowly dissipate as we get towards the end of the week, and allow weather systems to approach from the Pacific Ocean,” Erven explained. 

“It’s going to bring in a cooler, maritime air mass, and then showers start to re-enter our forecast beginning on Friday.”

Continue Reading

cjsu Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Cowichan Valley transit strike ending

Unifor and Transdev have agreed to the provincial mediator’s upcoming recommendations, ending the months long Cowichan Valley transit strike - the longest in BC History.

CVRD measures positive impact of culture and arts

The Cowichan Valley Regional District has released a report on the economic contribution of arts and culture to the region.

Early morning quake near Shawnigan Lake

A magnitude 3.0 earthquake near Shawnigan Lake Thursday morning.

B.C. steps up fight against South Asian extortion threats with new RCMP-led task force

The British Columbia RCMP will lead a specialized task force to improve the province’s response to extortion threats targeting the South Asian community. 

B.C. heat waves were made more likely by human-caused climate change, says report

Heat waves that blanketed British Columbia in August and early September were made much more likely by human-caused climate change.
- Advertisement -