As defined in the Dike Maintenance Act, a dike is an embankment, wall, fill piling, pump, gate, floodbox, pipe, sluice, culvert, canal, ditch, drain, or any other thing that is constructed, assembled, or installed to prevent the flooding of land. In British Columbia, dikes are works that address major flood hazards.
There are more than 200 regulated dikes in B.C. with a total length of over 1,100 kilometres, protecting 160,000 hectares of valuable land.
The Lower Mainland is dependent on the integrity of:
Diking in British Columbia started as early as 1864.
In 1894, the greatest flood on record occurred affecting extensive areas in the southern half of the province. Fortunately, development was still sparse and relatively little damage was caused. Later, as floodplain development continued, dikes were increasingly relied upon to protect these areas.
British Columbia’s second most damaging flood occurred in 1948 when a few dikes failed, resulting in:
A 2015 study released by the Fraser Basin Council determined that a reoccurrence of the 1894 flood today could cause approximately $23 billion dollars in damages to the Lower Mainland. This emphasizes the importance of having properly designed, constructed and maintained dikes.
Construction of new dikes, or upgrading of existing orphan dikes, will only be approved if:
The following document provides guidance on how to manage dikes within the province:
Further guidance on the primary aspects of implementing and managing dikes:
Provincial responsibilities and general supervision relative to the construction and maintenance of dikes lies with the offices of the inspector of dikes and deputy inspectors of dikes.
Their responsibilities include:
The B.C. Government and partners undertook an assessment of 74 dikes in the Lower Mainland. This assessment evaluated the level of protection provided by the dikes and identified major deficiencies.
The Province has classified the exposure consequence level from a potential major dike failure, for each dike in B.C. regulated under the Dike Maintenance Act and under the control and care of a diking authority. This classification is only a snapshot in time (2019) and may not reflect future conditions such as new developments or new critical infrastructure built in the area protected by the dike.
Consequence is the total effect of a hazardous event, composed of exposure (people and assets in the flood prone area), vulnerability (the susceptibility of people, assets or systems to the impacts of flooding) and capacity (the ability to manage and reduce flood risks and strengthen flood resiliency). The classifications provided here are based on evaluating only the exposure component of consequence (Tier 1).
Consequence is one of the major components of risk, with the other component being the probability of occurrence. This classification does not consider the probability of occurrence and is not considered a risk assessment.
These consequence classifications are intended for use for the following:
The classification rankings show only the overall ranking. This ranking is determined by combining and weighting scores from the individual categories of people, economy, agriculture, environment, and cultural heritage. The weighting of each consequence category is based on the confidence in the data, the understanding of potential impacts and the importance for socio-economic recovery. For further details please consult the full report.
Select the region to see the consequence classification for DMA-regulated dikes.
The consequence levels are as follows (from the lowest to the highest):
Insignificant, Minor, Moderate, Major, High
West Coast
South Coast (incl. Lower Mainland)
Thompson-Okanagan (Southern Interior)
Kootenay
Cariboo
Skeena
Omineca-Northeast (Peace-Omineca)
The documents below provide the full dike consequence assessment that was undertaken. It provides details on the development of the consequence classification framework, the classification process, recommended classification level, and its limitations.
For more information about the Dike Safety Program, please contact the deputy inspector of dikes in your area.