Canada’s top 10 weather stories of 2019
<p>Photo: Environment and Climate Change Canada.</p>

Photo: Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Environment and Climate Change Canada – Environment and Climate Change Canada recently released its 24th annual edition of Canada’s top 10 weather stories.
The list clearly shows, once again, that more and more Canadians are being impacted by extreme weather, from devastating wildfires and flooding to destructive storms and record droughts. Scientists have discovered that Canada is warming at nearly twice the global rate, with parts of western and northern Canada warming at a rate of three times the global average, and we know that, with warming, extreme weather events will happen more frequently.
This year, Canadians in every region of the country were affected by extreme weather or climate events. They included destructive hurricanes, record flooding, snow storms, extreme cold, record heat, tornadoes, forest fires and poor air quality. These events resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage and billions of lost dollars for our economy.
Many Canadians experienced brutally cold winters but, by the time summer came around, our North experienced record-breaking heat waves, with Arctic sea ice cover shrinking to its second lowest minimum extent on record. Cold winter conditions were experienced by almost all Canadians early in 2019. In spring, Prairie provinces saw record-breaking droughts, while Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick were struck by catastrophic flooding.
The top 10 list is ranked according to factors that include the impact they had on Canada and Canadians, the extent of the affected area, economic impacts, and longevity as a top news story.
- Another record-setting Ottawa River flood
- Active hurricane season as predicted
- sNo-good Prairie fall
- A brutal Febrrruary in Canada
- Record heat continues in Arctic
- On the Prairies…Too dry early, too wet later
- Weather witch stole Halloween
- Spring missing in the East
- Saint John River floods again
- Fewer fires, more burning
To read the individual top 10 story articles on the Environment and Climate Change Canada website, click here.