
Heat eases in parts of B.C., persists in Interior, as more temperature records fall
People walk on the beach during low tide as sailboats pass in Vancouver, on Sunday, July 7, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns
Environment Canada has lifted special weather statements about a record-breaking hot spell for much of the province, including Metro Vancouver and Victoria.
But it says the 'early season heat event' will persist in the southwestern Interior and western Kootenay regions, with temperatures in the low to mid-30s.
Environment Canada says the elevated temperatures brought by a ridge of high pressure will last in those areas until Thursday.
In the North Thompson and 100 Mile House, the weather office says hot conditions will likely persist even longer, with a 'gradual cooling trend' expected to come later in the week.
Five more daily temperature records were broken Tuesday and, for the fourth day in a row, B.C. was the hottest spot in Canada, with Lytton hitting 36.2 C.
Locations that unseated previous temperature records on Tuesday included Castlegar, Cranbrook, Nelson, Sparwood and Trail, after 27 records were broken on Sunday and Monday.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 11, 2025.
Brieanna Charlebois, The Canadian Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
31 minutes ago
- CTV News
Saskatchewan weather: Seasonal temperatures continue
Regina Watch WATCH: Seasonal temperatures are continuing in Saskatchewan this week. Sabeen Ahmad has your forecast.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Lightning strike plunges entirety of northwest B.C. into dark, thousands without power
More than 45,000 customers across northwest B.C. are without power after an outage at about 4:20 p.m. PT. The B.C. Hydro dashboard shows it is impacting the entire region from Vanderhoof, about 100 kilometres west of Prince George, all the way to Prince Rupert, more than 500 kilometres away as the crow flies. Haida Gwaii and parts of the far northwest around Stewart are also impacted. In an update posted online, the power provider says a lightning strike is to blame, with crews working to "restore service as quickly as possible." B.C. Hydro spokesperson Mike Kellett said resotration work would have to be done in stages, staring in Vanderhoof and working westward. He said it was expected power would be back "in a few hours." Kellett said due to the wide scale of the outage, it is likely the sole transmission line supplying power from Prince George to Prince Rupert had been impacted. Northwest B.C. does not have backup transmission lines, which makes the region susceptible to large-scale outages. In 2024, B.C. Premier David Eby announced plans to build new transmission lines between Prince George and Terrace in order to provide more reliable power to industrial customers in the region. There are no current reports of outages from phone or internet providers, though the region has also experienced loss of communications in the past, such as a 2022 incident in which a beaver downed a tree onto some lines, knocking out cellphones and internet for several hours.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Simcoe Muskoka weather details: June 12
Here are the latest weather details, plus the long-range forecast for York Region, Simcoe County and Muskoka.