Atmospheric river forecast in B.C. days after temperature records and drought
VANCOUVER — An atmospheric river packing “narrow bands of heavy precipitation” is forecast for parts of British Columbia just a week after numerous high temperature records were set amid concerns of drought.
A bulletin issued by the Public Safety Ministry warns that residents in the Lower Mainland, on Vancouver Island and on the north and central coasts can expect stormy weather through to Halloween.
It says that at the end of a drought, this influx can cause flooding, although extreme weather, such as the disastrous rain last November, is not in the forecast.
The ministry statement says the central coast could see between 50 and 100 millimetres of rain by Thursday, while 40 to 80 millimetres is forecast for Howe Sound, the Sunshine Coast, west coast of Vancouver Island and Vancouver’s North Shore mountains.