The Power Reality on Vancouver Island
Vancouver Island has more power outages per capita than most of urban Canada. This isn't a matter of debate or opinion — BC Hydro's own reliability statistics show that island customers experience longer and more frequent outages than Metro Vancouver, and significantly more than most urban centres in Ontario or Alberta. This is a known feature of island life, not a defect that's about to be fixed, and experienced islanders plan around it accordingly.
The causes are structural: Vancouver Island's power comes primarily through two submarine cables crossing the Strait of Georgia (the Vancouver Island Transmission Reinforcement project added a third cable, improving reliability), and the island's forested terrain means storm damage to transmission lines is frequent and sometimes severe. The mild Pacific climate that makes the island so liveable also brings wind storms, ice storms in higher elevations, and the occasional event that takes down trees across a wide area.
For someone moving from urban Canada, the power situation requires a mindset shift. You don't need to become a survivalist — most outages are 2–8 hours and easily managed with basic preparation. But the 2–5 day outages that happen every few years in storm-prone areas require a different level of readiness.
How Often Does the Power Go Out?
This varies significantly by location. Victoria and the Capital Regional District have been improving steadily — most Victoria residents experience 2–5 significant outages per year (anything over 30 minutes), with the majority resolving within 4 hours. The majority of these are local feeder-line issues rather than island-wide problems.
Rural areas, particularly on the east coast of the island (the Cowichan Valley, Comox Valley rural areas, areas east of Nanaimo), and the north island (Port Hardy, Port McNeill, Alert Bay area) see more outages, more frequently, with longer average restoration times. The combination of older distribution infrastructure, more trees near lines, and fewer crew resources for restoration means that a storm that knocks out Victoria for 4 hours might leave Courtenay rural areas dark for 24–36 hours.
Gulf Islands: The Gulf Islands operate partially on submarine cables and partially on island-specific generation, and their reliability varies by island. Saltspring Island has its own substation but still depends on submarine cables for primary power. Smaller islands (Hornby, Denman, Galiano, Mayne, Pender) have more vulnerability to extended outages because there are fewer redundant paths for power delivery.
The Basic Preparedness Kit
The provincial and federal guidance for emergency preparedness recommends being ready for 72 hours without external services. On Vancouver Island, where ferry disruptions can compound power outages and storm damage can delay restoration crews, a week of self-sufficiency is a more realistic target for rural residents.
What Every Island Household Should Have
- Flashlights and headlamps — headlamps are more practical than handheld flashlights for actual use. Have one per person plus spares. Keep fresh batteries or rechargeable versions topped up.
- Battery-powered or hand-crank radio — essential for getting local emergency information when internet and cell networks are degraded. BC Emergency Alert and local CHEK/CFAX broadcasts are your information sources during extended outages.
- Water supply — 4 litres per person per day for drinking and sanitation. Municipal water on Vancouver Island is generally reliable during outages, but well-water users lose pressure immediately when power goes out (electric pumps). A 2-week supply of stored water (or a gravity filter) is standard for rural islanders on wells.
- Food supply — non-perishable food for 7+ days. Focus on items your household actually eats rather than survival food you'll never consume. Canned goods, dried beans and grains, nuts, peanut butter, and commercially dried fruit are practical.
- Manual can opener — often forgotten, frequently needed.
- First aid kit — proper kit, not a travel-sized one. Island living occasionally means minor medical issues where the nearest clinic is 30 minutes away and you need to handle it yourself initially.
- Cash — when power is out, card machines don't work. $200–$500 in small bills provides options when digital payment infrastructure is down.
- Medications — maintain a 30-day supply buffer for any essential medications. Ferry disruptions can delay pharmacy deliveries.
- Phone battery banks — high-capacity power banks (20,000–30,000 mAh) keep phones and tablets charged through multiple cycles. Essential for communication when home power is out.
- Propane camp stove — for cooking when electric stoves don't work. A two-burner camp stove with two extra propane canisters ($30–$60 total) handles most cooking needs. Do not use indoors; carbon monoxide risk is real.
Heating — The Critical Winter Consideration
Many Vancouver Island homes heat with electricity, which becomes a problem in winter outages. The island's mild climate means temperatures rarely drop below -5°C even in the coldest nights in most areas, but a drafty house without heat in a January wind storm becomes uncomfortable quickly.
Options for staying warm during outages:
- Wood stove or pellet stove: The gold standard for island home heating backup. Many older island homes have wood stoves — look for this specifically when buying or renting in rural areas. A cord of firewood ($350–$550 delivered in 2026) stored before fall provides both primary heating supplementation and emergency backup.
- Propane heater (vented): Mr. Heater Buddy-style propane heaters can maintain liveable temperatures in one or two rooms of a house safely if used with adequate ventilation. Unvented propane heating is not safe for extended indoor use.
- Generator with electric heater: Viable but expensive to run for more than a day or two (see generator section below).
- Sleeping bags rated for low temperatures: Sometimes the simplest solution. A 0°C-rated sleeping bag for each household member is a $50–$150 investment that eliminates the heating concern for sleeping.
Backup Power Options
Portable Generators
A portable gasoline generator ($500–$1,500 for a quality 3,500–6,500W unit) is the most common backup power solution for island households. Important realities:
- They must be run outdoors only — never indoors, never in an attached garage. Carbon monoxide kills people every year from this mistake.
- Gasoline stored for more than 3 months degrades — use fuel stabilizer, rotate your storage, or expect starting problems when you need it most.
- A generator extension cord is required to safely run power from outside — buy a proper 10-gauge outdoor extension rated for the wattage of your generator.
- A whole-house connection requires a transfer switch installed by a licensed electrician (~$500–$1,200 installed). Running extension cords through windows is a temporary solution that works but isn't ideal.
- Noise — generators are loud enough to annoy neighbours, which matters in denser communities. The newer inverter generators (Honda EU2200i, Yamaha EF2200iS) are significantly quieter but cost $1,000–$1,500+.
- Gasoline supply during major regional outages can be strained — gas stations are also without power. Maintain a rotation of 20L of stored fuel with stabilizer.
Battery Storage Systems
Home battery backup systems (EcoFlow Delta Pro, Bluetti AC300, or larger whole-home systems like Tesla Powerwall or Franklin WH10 paired with solar) represent the growing alternative to generators. The advantages for island use are significant: silent operation, no fuel storage, automatic failover, and the ability to pre-charge before a forecast storm.
Portable station options ($600–$2,000): EcoFlow Delta Pro (3.6 kWh expandable), Jackery 2000 Pro, Bluetti AC200MAX. These power lights, phones, laptops, small appliances, and potentially a refrigerator for 6–24 hours depending on load. A realistic solution for 1–2 day outages for most households.
Whole-home battery backup ($8,000–$25,000 installed): Tesla Powerwall 3 (13.5 kWh), Enphase IQ Battery 10, or similar systems paired with solar provide multi-day independence. The economics work best with a solar array; without solar, you're buying expensive stored grid power. For rural islanders with frequent outages, the payback calculation increasingly works — especially when you factor in the quality-of-life value of never losing power.
Solar + Storage
Vancouver Island's mild, cloudy climate is not ideal for solar, but it's not terrible either. Victoria and the south island get more sun than Metro Vancouver. The Cowichan Valley and Comox Valley have enough sunny days to make residential solar viable, especially for households with backup battery systems that store daytime generation for evening use. A 6kW solar array plus a 13.5 kWh battery system typically costs $25,000–$40,000 installed before incentives. BC Hydro net metering allows you to sell surplus power back to the grid.
"After the first time you lose power for three days in a January storm, you understand why every long-time islander has a wood stove, a generator, or at minimum a very good flashlight and the phone number for the nearest motel."
Well Water During Outages
If your island home has a drilled well (common outside municipal service areas), you lose water pressure immediately when power goes out — the electric pump stops working. This is a planning issue for rural islanders that urban residents don't face.
Solutions used by islanders:
- Stored water: Fill jugs, bathtubs, and food-safe containers when you know a storm is coming. A bathtub filled before an outage provides 300+ litres for flushing toilets even when the pump is down.
- Gravity-fed rain catchment: Some rural properties have gravity-fed systems from hillside cisterns that provide pressure without electricity. Ask about this when looking at rural properties.
- Generator to run the pump: A transfer switch and properly sized generator can power your well pump during an outage. Confirm your pump's starting wattage requirements with an electrician before buying a generator for this purpose.
- Whole-home battery backup: If your battery system is sized to run the pump, well water becomes non-issue during outages.
Storm Preparedness — The Annual Ritual
Experienced island residents treat storm preparedness as a fall routine rather than a reactive scramble. The things worth doing each September-October before storm season:
- Test your generator — start it, run it for 15 minutes under light load, check the oil, top up fuel
- Stock your emergency supplies — food, water, medications (see list above)
- Trim trees near the house that could fall on power lines or the structure — many island outages are caused by trees on lines on private property
- Know your BC Hydro account login and the outage map URL (bchydro.com/outages) — this is how you track restoration progress
- Know the location of your nearest emergency shelter — every municipality publishes these; they're activated during extended cold-weather outages
- Charge all battery banks before forecasted storms
The Bigger Picture — Earthquake Preparedness
Vancouver Island sits in an active seismic zone. The Cascadia Subduction Zone — a major fault running along the Pacific coast — has produced megathrust earthquakes in the past and will produce them again. The geological record suggests a magnitude 8–9 earthquake is overdue. Our full emergency preparedness guide covers earthquake readiness in detail, but the connection to power outages is this: a significant earthquake on the island would cause extended power outages, potentially for weeks, alongside all the other disruptions. The supplies and systems that handle a week-long storm outage are also the foundation of earthquake preparedness.
The Province of BC's emergency preparedness program (PreparedBC) offers free guides, checklists, and a household preparedness workbook. Worth downloading and using — it's practical rather than alarmist.
A Realistic Preparedness Level for Most Islanders
The goal isn't to turn your home into a survivalist compound. The goal is to be comfortable and functional through the outages that actually happen, and ready for the more serious events that could happen. For most island households, this means:
- 72-hour emergency kit (food, water, first aid, communication) as a starting point
- Extended food and water supply to 2 weeks for rural households
- A heating solution that doesn't depend on electricity
- A power backup sufficient for your actual needs (phones, lights, fridge — a $600 battery station covers this for a day; a generator or bigger system for longer)
- Well-water users need a pump solution or stored water
- Cash, medications, and fuel reserves
This isn't expensive or difficult. The basic kit ($300–$600 in supplies plus whatever you spend on backup power) buys significant peace of mind and practical capability. And on an island where storms are part of the weather cycle and the power infrastructure has known limitations, it's simply part of being a prepared resident.
See also: Emergency Preparedness on Vancouver Island, Well Water & Utilities Guide, and Climate Change & Natural Hazards.