The Guardian (USA)

World’s largest skating rink on thin ice as Canada’s warm winter prevents opening

- Agence France-Presse

Canada’s Rideau Canal Skateway – the largest outdoor rink in the world and a Unesco heritage site – may not open this winter for the first time in five decades, due to a lack of ice.

Ottawa is in the grips of its third-warmest winter ever recorded, according to Environmen­t Canada, with temperatur­es hovering just below freezing through most of December and January.

And they’re now forecast to climb. “Mother Nature has presented us with a big challenge this year,” Bruce Devine, National Capital Commission senior manager responsibl­e for the skateway, said.

“Mild temperatur­es have made it difficult to make good, solid ice that can support the weight of our equipment and skaters,” he said.

For the canal to freeze up, temperatur­es must hold steady at -10 to -20C for almost two weeks.

“Currently in several spots the ice is porous and of not very good quality,” he said.

Although he remains optimistic for what would be the latest opening on record, others worry the skateway might not open at all this year.

A brief cold spell is forecast to be coming. “The weather will be more conducive [for skating] next week,” according to meteorolog­ist Peter Kimbell. “But will it be enough, I don’t know.”

The winding 7.8km long (4.8 miles) skateway though the heart of Ottawa is the size of 90 Olympic rinks, according to Guinness World Records, which in 2005 confirmed it was the world’s biggest. In recent years it has attracted an average of 22,000 visitors a day.

Visitors can take in views of parliament from the canal, while stopping at warming huts or food stands along the way offering snacks and hot beverages. In the past, commuters have been seen skating to work with briefcase in hand.

“It’s part of the DNA of local residents and attracts a lot of visitors from afar,” said Devine.

The skateway normally opens at the end of December for 30 to 60 days of skating. But its opening has shifted later and later over the years, and for shorter periods.

“It’s really too bad for all the businesses and all the people who find joy” in skating, said student Clara HarmanDenh­oed, 22. But the situation highlights “the impact that climate change has on us here”.

That view was echoed by Canada’s environmen­t minister, Steven Guilbeault, who said Tuesday, “This is yet another example of how our climate is changing in Canada.”

“I don’t think anyone has seen it this bad,” said Davey Wright, who operates shacks on the canal selling flat fried dough dusted with sugar or cinnamon.

Local businesses, after suffering through pandemic lockdowns and a disruptive trucker-led protest last year, are taking a big hit.

The city was forced to scale back outdoor activities for its annual Winterlude festival, which runs until 20 February, while hotel associatio­n president Steve Ball said bookings are way down.

“Skating on the canal is our blockbuste­r [attraction] and what people talk about, why they come back,” he said.

The National Capital Commission has ordered a flurry of climate adaptation studies to try to keep the skateway open earlier in the season and for longer periods.

Shawn Kenny, a professor at Carleton University in Ottawa who studies climate impacts on ice, has tried various fixes inspired from ski hills and seasonal ice roads in the Arctic, for example, using snow fans to blow ice crystals on to the canal to kickstart ice formation, and clearing snow that acts as insulation.

He is currently testing thermosyph­ons, used in the far north to prevent permafrost from thawing beneath railways, roads, pipelines and buildings, to regulate canal ice temperatur­es.

But he warned that adaptation may not be enough in the future: “Eventually we’ll get to a stage where it might not be possible to open the skateway.”

 ?? ?? Pedestrian­s walk along the the Rideau Canal in Ottawa, Canada. Unseasonab­ly warm weather raises the prospect that the Rideau Canal Skateway – the longest in the world – will not open this season for the first time due to lack of ice. Photograph: Dave Chan/AFP/Getty Images
Pedestrian­s walk along the the Rideau Canal in Ottawa, Canada. Unseasonab­ly warm weather raises the prospect that the Rideau Canal Skateway – the longest in the world – will not open this season for the first time due to lack of ice. Photograph: Dave Chan/AFP/Getty Images
 ?? Photograph: Dave Chan/AFP/Getty Images ?? Bruce Devine checks the ice condition on the Rideau Canal Skateway on 8 February. This winter has brought wild and unseasonab­ly warm weather to Canada’s capital.
Photograph: Dave Chan/AFP/Getty Images Bruce Devine checks the ice condition on the Rideau Canal Skateway on 8 February. This winter has brought wild and unseasonab­ly warm weather to Canada’s capital.

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