Lethbridge Herald

Building for the future

CANADA SEEKS UPDATED CLIMATE-CHANGE PREDICTION­S FOR NEW BUILDING CODES

- Mia Rabson THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

The National Research Council says Canada’s homes and highways were built with assumption­s about weather patterns that are no longer relevant, thanks to climate change.

Now the NRC is asking for help to figure out what kind of weather to expect in the coming years, so it can revamp national building codes to ensure everything from houses and office towers to bridges and wastewater systems can withstand the consequenc­es of a warmer planet.

“Canada’s buildings and public infrastruc­ture systems ... are designed based on historic data assuming a stationary climate, and were not designed to accommodat­e certain extreme weather events being attributed to climate change,” reads a Nov. 6 tender issued by the council.

“As such, there is a growing risk of failure of buildings and infrastruc­ture.” From melting permafrost and coastal erosion due to higher sea levels in the north, to the unusual warmth and dryness of the summer in British Columbia this year, experts say Canada has already started to bear witness to the effects of climate change.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau warned about the increasing frequency of extreme weather last spring while he was touring homes in western Quebec damaged by the engorged Ottawa River.

The costs faced by the federal disaster financial assistance program have also soared. Since 2011, the program has spent an average of $360 million a year, three times what the average annual cost was over the previous decade. Most of that is for floods and forest fires.

Adapting the building code to mitigate and adapt to new weather patterns is one of the commitment­s of the national climate change framework, agreed to by Ottawa and 11 provinces and territorie­s almost a year ago. In the spring budget, Ottawa set aside $40 million over five years for the NRC’s five-year climate-resilient buildings project.

But before the building codes can be adapted, the NRC needs to know what kind of extreme weather to expect.

The tender seeks a consultant to update weather and climate data for 660 locations across the country, including expected temperatur­es, wind patterns, rain and snow fall, and humidity.

The successful applicant will work with the Meteorolog­ical Service of Canada as well as officials from Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada to develop informatio­n about the expected impacts from average increases in global temperatur­e from 0.5 degrees Celsius up to a maximum of 5 C.

The earth has already warmed up more than one degree on average compared to preindustr­ial levels and the Paris climate change accord commits the world to trying to keep it from hitting two degrees by the end of the century.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? People walk past the flooded parking lot of the Pebb Building, located across from the Ottawa River, following a rain storm in Ottawa last month. The National Research Council says Canada's homes and highways were built with assumption­s about weather...
Associated Press photo People walk past the flooded parking lot of the Pebb Building, located across from the Ottawa River, following a rain storm in Ottawa last month. The National Research Council says Canada's homes and highways were built with assumption­s about weather...

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