The Peterborough Examiner

‘The lost season’: Winter comes to a close as Canada’s warmest on record

Outdoor skating rinks didn’t happen

- JORDAN OMSTEAD NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO

The warmest winter on record could have far-reaching effects on everything from wildfire season to erosion, climatolog­ists say, while offering a preview of what the season could resemble in the not-sodistant future unless steps are taken to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Winter comes to a close on Tuesday night — early Wednesday on Canada’s East Coast — with the arrival of the spring equinox. But climatolog­ist David Phillips says it’s almost as if this winter in Canada never happened.

“I called it the lost season,” said Phillips, a senior climatolog­ist with Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada.

Canada shattered temperatur­e records this winter, and it wasn’t close, Phillips said, referring to national data going back to 1948.

While winter’s end is typically marked by the equinox, climatolog­ists look at what’s known as meteorolog­ical winter, the threemonth period from December to February. Over that period, Canada was 5.2 C warmer than average, said Phillips. That’s 1.1 degrees warmer than the previous record set in 2009-2010.

There were bouts of extreme winter weather across Canada, from a January deep freeze on the Prairies to a massive snowfall in the Maritimes in February. But the warmer-than-normal and unusual weather was widely felt across the country.

This winter, Phillips said, “was put on hold — and not on ice.”

Some people may have been grateful for a break on heating bills or for periodic balmy days, but Phillips says the record-breaking temperatur­es upended Canada’s winter way of life. Winter festivals were cancelled, ski resorts faced closures, and flora and fauna emerged prematurel­y. Remote First Nations in Ontario and Manitoba that depend on ice roads issued states of emergency due to poor conditions.

Outdoor skating, often regarded as a picture-postcard image of Canada’s winter life, suffered too. Ottawa’s iconic Rideau Canal skateway was open for a few days this winter, after the previous year’s unpreceden­ted season-long closure.

Damon Matthews, a Concordia University climate scientist who has tracked climate change’s impact on retreating rinks, cited Wayne Gretzky and Joni Mitchell as he noted the place of outdoor skating in Canada’s imaginings of winter.

Mitchell’s longing for a “river I could skate away on,” evoked in her 1971song “River,” may be shared not just by those who decamped to California, but by people across Canada this year and in years to come, he said. Gretzky’s origin story of learning to play on outdoor rinks may be a story denied to other aspiring hockey players in southern Ontario.

“It’s a shame that’s the case,” he said.

Experts say the drivers of this winter’s record-breaking warmth include El Niño and human-caused climate change. Other related factors include record-high global ocean temperatur­es and residual heat from earlier in 2023.

El Niño, a natural climate phenomenon that typically comes around every two to seven years, was strong this year but not the strongest.

The United Nation’s World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on said its peak fell short of at least two other El Niño winters in 1997 and 2015.

“El Niño has contribute­d to these record temperatur­es, but heattrappi­ng greenhouse gases are unequivoca­lly the main culprit,” WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo said in an update earlier this month, referring to a string of consecutiv­e global monthly temperatur­e records.

Climate change is expected to crank up temperatur­es in winter more than any other season in Canada, said Phillips, the Environmen­t Canada climatolog­ist. If the world continues to emit greenhouse gases on a “business as usual” scale until 2050, Phillips says his own community of Barrie, in central Ontario, could see winters as warm as this one on a regular basis around 2065.

Less snow on the ground for the spring melt means less water available to irrigate farmlands and replenish reservoirs. As snow melts, it also helps to reduce the risk of wildfires.

Almost all of Western Canada, northern Ontario and parts of northern Quebec were under drought conditions as of the end of February, says a recent update from Environmen­t Canada. Parts of southern Alberta and northern British Columbia reported conditions typically seen once every 50 years.

 ?? ?? A windsurfer tries the waters of Lake Ontario in February.
The warmest winter on record could have far-reaching effects on everything from wildfires to erosion, climatolog­ists say.
A windsurfer tries the waters of Lake Ontario in February. The warmest winter on record could have far-reaching effects on everything from wildfires to erosion, climatolog­ists say.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada