British Columbia

Avalanche Canada ending avalanche forecasting this week due to pandemic

Avalanche Canada is issuing its final avalanche hazard forecast of the season this week, ending its forecasting a month earlier than usual after the COVID-19 pandemic put a stop to backcountry operations across western Canada.

Organization says outbreak has choked data stream from experts needed to create accurate predictions

Avalanche Canada is ending its avalanche hazard forecasting a month early, saying COVID-19 has made it impossible to gather data needed for accurate predictions. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

Avalanche Canada is issuing its final avalanche hazard forecast of the season this week, saying the COVID-19 pandemic has made it impossible to gather data needed for accurate predictions.

The non-profit usually puts its avalanche forecasts together using data sent in by a wide network of experts across the region. Since backcountry operations were suspended due to the outbreak, that data isn't being gathered — which means Avalanche Canada's team doesn't have the information it needs to continue its forecasts.

The agency said its last forecast will be issued on Saturday, remaining in effect until Monday.

The organization, based in Revelstoke, B.C., usually issues daily avalanche forecasts throughout the winter for much of Western Canada's mountain ranges. Danger ratings run from low to extreme, with the latter meaning people should avoid all avalanche terrain.

A statement said Tuesday's decision to suspend forecasts is also meant to keep people out of the backcountry so they don't risk putting unnecessary strain on the health-care system.

"We do not want to provide a service that promotes recreating in mountainous terrain, where there is often significant hazard," Avalanche Canada's executive director, Gilles Valade, wrote in the statement.

"This is clearly not the time for taking any sort of risk." 

Both B.C. and Alberta have declared a provincewide state of emergency. Health-care officials at provincial and national levels have urged people to stay home unless absolutely essential to avoid spreading the virus and overloading the country's health-care system.

Avalanche Canada is also shutting down its Mountain Information Network, or MIN, to discourage people from going into the backcountry. The public usually uses the network to submit their own real-time trip reports and observations, which can help forecasters in the absence of other data. 

"We do not take these steps lightly," Valade continued. "But we feel it is essential that we work together and do what we can to avoid putting any extra load on our health-care system at this time."

Avalanche Canada warned the avalanche forecasting system was at risk last week, with the data stream from professional sources already beginning to dry up.

Experts have said March is typically one of the busiest times for avalanche-related accidents.