From tree maintenance to simple hardware store upgrades, here's what you can do to prepare for climate change - Action News
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Toronto

From tree maintenance to simple hardware store upgrades, here's what you can do to prepare for climate change

From simple upgrades you can buy at the hardware store to expert advice on tree health to stricter building codes, much can be done to prepare cities to cope with the new environmental reality.

Tree maintenance and storm drainage strategies among the measures being taken

How to prepare your home for climate change

3 years ago
Duration 2:18
As extreme weather events become increasingly common, experts are warning homeowners to start preparing for the impacts of climate change. For most people, safety planning is as easy as going to the hardware store.

Our planet is changing. So is our journalism. This story is part of a CBC News initiative entitled "Our Changing Planet" to show and explain the effects of climate change and what is being done about it.


Philip Van Wassenaer crouches down to pound nails into the base of a 25-metre-tall tree in Scarborough, Ont.

He isn't tapping for sap the nails around the base of this tree will help him diagnose its health.

Once the sonic tomograph sensors are attached to the nails, Van Wassenaergently taps each one, sending sound waves through the trunk. The device measures how quickly the sound travels, and a small screen shows different colours for different speeds, essentially showing what the tree looks like on the inside andexposingany rot.

"It may be attributable to climate change, but we are getting asked more often to do a deeper look at the risk of urban trees," said Van Wassenaer, a consulting arboristfor 30 years.

"We see climate change happening. It's not somewhere else, it's here. But that doesn't necessarily mean that all our trees have all of a sudden become a problem."

WATCH | Arborist Philip Van Wassenaer uses a sonic tomograph to look inside a tree:

Scanning a tree

3 years ago
Duration 2:38
Arborist Philip Van Wassenaer shows how a sonic tomograph provides an inside look at the health of a tree.

Van Wassenaersays there needs to be a more balanced approach:trees need to besaved whenever possible because theyabsorb greenhouse gases, which helps mitigate climate changeand prevent soil erosion, which contributes to mudslides.

"Some trees absolutely should be removed, many trees can be made smaller. They could be cabled. There are so many conservation techniques."

The devastating effects of climate change and extreme weather are no longer theoretical, and experts say tree maintenance is just one of several preventative measurespeople and municipalitiesshouldtake to prepare for more intense and frequent storms.

Large tree branches block the road in the Beaches area of Toronto after a severe thunderstorm brought high winds and heavy rain to the area. (Alan Habbick/CBC)

Different parts of Canada have 'slightly different risks'

Cheryl Evans,director of flood and wildfire resilience at the University of Waterloo's Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation,said "every location in the country has slightly different risks that are present now and that will continue to increase."

Residents should regularly inspecttrees around their properties and do preventive maintenance, like pruning, when needed.

Cheryl Evans is the director of flood and wildfire resilience at the University of Waterloos Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation. (Submitted by Cheryl Evans)

"As the winters warm, we're gonna get a lot more freezing rain as opposed to snow, so we're gonna see a lot more burden on trees so check how close the trees are to your hydro lines."

Other regions will have hotter summers and drier conditions, which contributed to the wildfires that destroyed the hamlet of Lytton, B.C., this past June.

Meanwhile, in the fall, atmospheric rivers deluged British Columbia's Interior, causing flooding and mudslides in place like Princeton, Agassiz and Merritt.

"For most people,floods, high heat and freezing rain those are going to be some of the key impacts," said Evans.

She said some preparations are as easy as a trip to the hardware store.

"Make sure your eavestroughs are clear and your downspouts allow water to flow away from your foundation.Put valuable things or potentially toxic items up on a basement shelf, so they don't get damaged or contaminate water."

A downed log smoulders after a wildfire swept through a forested area near Chasm Provincial Park, near 70 Mile House, B.C., on July 15. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Cities preparing, too

Evans says national building codes are being updated and may require builders to use such things as additional nails for roof shingles and hurricane straps in high-risk areas or installbackflow valves and sump pumps to prevent sewer back-ups inhomes.

Just as homeowners may want to do a risk assessment and preventative maintenance on their properties, cities across the country are preparing for climate change just on a larger scale.

Glenn McGillivray,managingdirector of the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction at Western University in London, Ont., says municipalities are being called on to prepare their infrastructurefor more common extreme weather events.

"The beauty of engineering is that all we have to do is say, 'Let's build this to a higher standard,' and the engineers can go to work and determine what that standard should be," said McGillivray.

Soldiers fill sandbags to help protect dikes from flooding again in Princeton, B.C., on Nov. 24. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

But he says tools are needed to better understand where the risk is better flood mapping, for example, and better forest fire risk hazard mapping.

"We know what kind of things can be done to make our infrastructure more resilient," saidMcGillivray."It's going to be costly, but inaction is going to be far costlier."

Putting in stormwater ponds

Lou Di Gironimo,general manager of Toronto Water, says storms have become more severe over the past few decades and the city has invested billions of dollars in flood mitigation programs.

Lou Di Gironimo is the general manager at Toronto Water. (OCWA)

"We're increasing the capacity of our system by putting in stormwater ponds, we're putting in place holding tanks, we're putting in place larger sewers in order to handle larger storm events," he said. "[Storms are] dropping a lot more rain in a shorter period of time. Instead of filling a bathtub with a faucet slowly, it's like using a firehose."

After storms in 2006 and 2013, the city's basement flooding program studied 67 different sewer shedareas at risk of back-up, and prioritized problem spots for $2.1 billion in improvements.

"We're hardening those locations, giving them greater protection and greater resiliency, so they are not damaged during storm events," saidDi Gironimo.

What Toronto is doing on a local level, the federal government is doing nationally an all-encompassing national adaptation strategy for climate change is underway.

McGillivray, fromthe Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction, saysitwill map parts of the country for possible impacts on agriculture, transportation and supply chains from extreme weather events.

"This document is absolutelycritical for climate change adaptation and risk reduction," he says of the plan, which is set to be released in the fall of 2022.

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