VANCOUVER — Ryan Ness of the Canadian Climate Institute says he’s been following the “terrible tragedy” of deadly flash flooding unfolding in Texas, where more than 100 people have died.
But he’s also worried Canada isn’t doing enough to prevent such disasters here, saying the country needs to invest in flood mapping, infrastructure and early warning systems.
“Luckily, there are many ways that we can protect ourselves, but we have to make the effort,” said Ness, who is the research director for adaptation at the policy research organization.
“You know, first of all, we have to understand where the risk is.”
He said many parts of Canada don’t have flood maps, “so it’s hard to know where to protect or where to send warnings.”
Flood warning systems are also needed to help people in the path of flash floods “prepare or get away, if they can,” while long-term infrastructure upgrades are needed to protect risk zones.
“In some cases, that means putting things in the houses like backflow valves that keep sewers from backing up,” he said.
“Or it can mean building flood walls along rivers to keep flooding from happening. Or it can mean making sure that city planning doesn’t allow more new housing in flood risk zones.”
The raging flash floods in Texas — among the worst in the United States in decades — slammed into camps and homes along the Guadalupe River before daybreak Friday. Some survivors were found clinging to trees.
The disaster has put a focus on both the risk of flash flooding as well as how to predict or prevent it.
Ness warned that climate change is making flash flooding worse and many Canadian cities, provinces and territories don’t have laws in place to prevent development in dangerous areas.
He called increased risk of flash flooding and more severe storms “the new reality.”
Flash floods have stuck across Canada over the past year, including Coquitlam, B.C., where an atmospheric river rain event triggered a mudslide that killed a teacher in October, and Toronto, where torrential rain overwhelmed drainage last July and caused about $990 million in insured losses.
Ness said that in hilly areas of B.C.’s Interior with fast water runoff, flash floods can sweep away people’s homes with “very little warning.”
He said flash flooding can be made worse in areas burned by wildfire, where soil that is no longer held together by plant life “is much more likely to maybe turn into a mudslide or a landslide.”
He said other risk areas are in Alberta in the front ranges of the Rockies featuring lots of rock and little absorbent soil.
“When it does rain, it can flow downhill very quickly. The town of Canmore (in Alberta), for example, has identified this as a major risk and has a strategy to try to deal with it,” said Ness. Massive floods hit the town in 2013.
In Montreal and Toronto, flash floods are usually due to paved areas with no soil to soak up heavy rain, Ness said.
“And the water rises very quickly in rivers and streams that run through those areas, and it also rises very quickly in sewers, and that’s what backs up into people’s basements most often, and causes basement flooding,” said Ness.
He said Toronto has a multibillion-dollar strategy to improve storm sewers. But it takes a long time to find that much funding, and the type of disruptive construction required isn’t an easy fix.
“That’s another reason to start making these investments as soon as possible, because it is going to take some time. But climate change isn’t going to wait,” said Ness.
He said Canada needs to adapt for flash flooding much more quickly.
“There are many smart engineers and government officials who know what to do, but we need to support and invest in the projects to adapt to this new reality. Otherwise, we are not going to be ready.”
— with files from The Associated Press
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 8, 2025.
Nono Shen, The Canadian Press
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