Many British Columbians are “overconfident and underprepared” to cope with storm-triggered power outages, a new BC Hydro report shows.
In a commissioned by the electric utility last month, more than half of Metro Vancouver residents said their region was the most prepared for storm-related outages in the province. That’s despite ranking as the least likely to prepare for such an event.
“Storm season is off to an early start this year — numerous atmospheric river events and a bomb cyclone brought high levels of wind and precipitation to ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ over the past couple of months,” notes the report, released less than 72 hours after a touched down at the University of British Columbia.
ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ has already seen an increase in the average number of storms in a given year. In 2014, there were 52 storms across the province, but in the last few years, ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ has averaged 117.
“It’s sort of everywhere,” says BC Hydro spokesperson Kyle Donaldson, noting storm-related outages affect about a million people a year in ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½
On Tuesday morning, the power went out for tens of thousands of people across the North Shore, Vancouver as well as the Gulf and Vancouver islands.
In 60 per cent of outages in the province, the culprit is wind and rain storms hinging trees over transmission lines or knocking them flat across roads.
But winter and summer weather rarely work in isolation. This year, an untold number of trees have been weakened by June's record-breaking heat wave, plus the summer drought conditions across much of eastern Vancouver Island and the ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ Interior.
Add a La Niña-driven surge in rainfall and the province could be walking into “” for fall and winter outages, according to a separate BC Hydro report.
WHY YOUR ELECTRICITY SUPPLY IS AFFECTED BY CLIMATE
The report notes that so far this year, a La Niña-dominated climate in ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ has led to “stormier conditions than normal.”
This fall has already seen a rise above what’s considered normal rain. In September, triple the amount of rain fell on ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ compared to a normal month, rising to 151 millimetres compared to the usual 51 millimetres, according to Environment ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½.
Such drastic swings from what was once thought of as normal are expected to continue long into the future. The world’s climate system is now under the influence of atmospheric carbon concentrations over . That’s a level nearly 38 per cent higher than any time in the past 800,000 years. With more carbon comes higher global temperatures, leading to wild swings in summer heat and extreme winter weather.
Natural Resources ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½’s assessment of future climate concludes the frequency and magnitude of extreme weather — from ice and heavy snowstorms to punishing wind — are likely to lead to greater interruptions in electricity supply at a time much of society is preparing to migrate their energy demands to the electricity grid.
AT LEAST HALF OF ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ UNDERPREPARED
Provincewide, just under half said they haven’t taken any steps to prepare for a power outage, while 52 per cent said they don’t have an emergency kit.
In ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½, just over a quarter of residents said they had experienced a storm-related power outage in the past year, though that rose to three on Vancouver Island and five in the province’s north.
In contrast to the province’s biggest urban area, the parts of the province most likely to experience power outages were also found to be the most prepared. More than half of residents in northern ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ and Vancouver Island said they have an emergency kit ready, according to the BC Hydro survey.
That's still a long way off from where British Columbians need to be to weather storms, earthquakes and wildfires, says Ryan Reynolds, a University of British Columbia researcher in the School of Regional and Community Planning.
“There’s definitely an under-preparedness throughout ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½, not just in ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½,” he tells Glacier Media.
The survey also found gaps in how reliant people were on technology during a power outage. Seven out of 10 British Columbians said it’s either “important” or “very important” to have a cellphone during a power outage. In Metro Vancouver, three-quarters of people surveyed said they relied on their cellphones in an outage — more than anywhere else in the province.
In another sign of how much urban British Columbians shrug off personal relationships in favour of technology, 13 per cent of Metro Vancouverites said they would rather be free of their partner for a day than their smart phone.
A PREPARATION FEEDBACK LOOP
Past research into emergency preparedness after Hurricane Sandy in the United States has found rates of preparedness go up drastically when residents have lived through a disaster.
But Reynolds says living through a disaster, even as seemingly benign as a power outage, can lead people to react in often conflicting ways.
Following a , Reynolds and colleague Alexa Tanner carried out research in the community. They looked at how residents responded over the long term.
Reynolds says he documented some people “waking up,” while others created a new baseline for what level of risk they tolerate. In other words, they were more likely to treat a false warning as a let down, shrug it off and say, “Well, it didn’t happen to me.”
“We tend to forget that experience and, as a result, we undervalue risk,” Reynolds says.
The obvious delusion there, he says, “is you were lucky this time.”
As seen in the BC Hydro study, believing your luck will run out tends to be more common in places regularly hit by blizzards, extreme heat events or wildfires, in turn, leading people to prepare more. Those living in small, more remote communities who have no choice but to be self-sufficient are better prepared to deal with disaster, says Reynolds.
“On Galiano Island, you’re going to be more used to being on your own because you have to be. Whereas if you live in Metro Vancouver, you can walk down to the store.”
GET READY, MAKE A LIST
BC Hydro recommends residents of the province reassess how prepared they are for storms, expected to become more powerful and unpredictable as global climate change drives intense weather events.
One place to start is the utility’s “,” which walks residents through developing a preparedness plan, building an emergency kit and advice on what to do during and after an outage.
The survey involved 801 ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ residents from Oct. 15 to 19, and carries a margin of error of 3.56 per cent.