ECCC Issues 2016 Summer Severe Weather Summary

Environment & Climate Change Canada (ECCC) issued, for the first time in recent memory, an annual summary of summer severe weather statistics for the Canadian Prairies. With 2016 on record as particularly active year, it’s helpful to receive official numbers from Canada’s official source for weather information.

ECCC defines what exactly a severe thunderstorm event is in their bulletin and what numbers they’re using for averages:

This summary provides the severe weather report numbers for the 2016
summer severe weather season on the Canadian Prairies (Alberta,
Saskatchewan and Manitoba), focusing specifically on severe weather
caused by thunderstorms between April and September. This summary
also compares the 2016 season with the 30 year average (for
tornadoes the 1980-2009 average is used).

A severe thunderstorm event is the occurrence of one or more of:
large hail (two centimetres or larger in diameter), heavy rain (50
mm or more within one hour, strong winds (gusts of 90 km/h or
greater, which could cause structural wind damage) or a tornado.

Summer Severe Weather Events

This year had a total of of 595 summer severe weather reports across Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, a 139% increase over the 30-year average of 249 reports. The largest increase occurred in hail events, where a total of 368 events marked nearly a 2x increase over the 30-year average of 129 events. Notably, Manitoba ended up with the highest number of reports, given that Alberta typically receives more hail than areas further east.1 Manitoba ended up taking top spot in all severe weather categories, which will come to no surprise to those who remember the relentless nature of this summer’s thunderstorm activity.

2016 Severe Weather Event Breakdown

Event Type201630-Year Average% Change
Hail368129+185%
Wind10853+104%
Rain4024+67%
Tornadoes4643+7%
2016 and 30-year normal severe thunderstorm event numbers for Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba.

Across all 3 provinces, numbers were up for every single category. Wind reports were above normal as well, which is expected with a significant increase in hail reports; the same features that help thunderstorms produce large hail also often lead to the capability of severe wind gusts. It was also a very wet year across the Prairies with a 67% increase in severe rain reports; of note it was a very wet summer across the Prairies with the wettest areas (compared to normal) being the Southern Red River Valley, southwestern Saskatchewan into southeastern Alberta, and northwestern Alberta. Of note in Manitoba was Letellier, which after taking a beating from what seemed like every single thunderstorm that formed in the Red River Valley ended up with a whopping 752 mm of rain this summer.

2016 Manitoba Severe Weather Event Breakdown

Event Type201630-Year Average% Change
Hail14733+345%
Wind5514+293%
Rain208+150%
Tornadoes1810+80%
2016 and 30-year normal severe thunderstorm event numbers for Manitoba.

While tornado numbers were within 10% of normal across the Prairies, Manitoba had significantly more than typical with a 80% increase over the 30-year normal in 2016. Several of these events were also high-profile events, with tornadoes in Waywayseecapo and Long Plain First Nation causing extensive damage and displacing many people, alongside several other damaging tornadoes events including significant damage in the Glenboro region. Another tornado narrowly missed Morden, however the town was slammed by severe winds in the rear-flank downdraft which caused widespread tree damage throughout the town. Hail reports stand out exceptionally in Manitoba, with nearly a 350% increase over the 30-year average. Overall, all severe weather parameters were well above normal this year in Manitoba thanks to an exceptionally active summer.

2016 Saskatchewan Severe Weather Event Breakdown

Event Type201630-Year Average% Change
Hail7746+67%
Wind1921-10%
Rain97+29%
Tornadoes1418-22%
2016 and 30-year normal severe thunderstorm event numbers for Saskatchewan.

By comparison, Saskatchewan had a relatively quiet summer. While it was very wet in the southwest, the number of severe events was about on par. There were some notable ones, such as the Estevan flood which saw 137 mm of rain fall in must a few hours, but all was more or less on par. Perhaps the biggest news story from Saskatchewan in 2016 was the abundance of cold-core funnel clouds, which highlighted that there are educational opportunities within the public and media sectors with respect to the spectrum of “skinny things in the sky” and what sort of attitude and precautions are appropriate in specific situations.

2016 Alberta Severe Weather Event Breakdown

Event Type201630-Year Average% Change
Hail14450+188%
Wind3418+89%
Rain119+22%
Tornadoes1415-7%
2016 and 30-year normal severe thunderstorm event numbers for Alberta.

Alberta saw a significant increase in hail and wind events, but the rest remained close to on-par for the 30-year average. I can’t speak to their numbers too much as I was keeping plenty busy with the weather here in Manitoba!

Summer Severe Weather Bulletins

ECCC also supplied the number of bulletins they issued across the Prairie region this summer.

2016 Summer Severe Weather Bulletin Breakdown

Type201630-Year Average% Change
Warnings36853036+2.1%
Watches11931067+11.8%
Total48784103+1.9%
2016 and 30-year normal severe thunderstorm bulletin numbers for Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba.

The important part to note here is that the warnings are issued for smaller regions than watches. This means that there will be more warnings any given year than there are watches, not that a lot of places without severe thunderstorm watches received warnings. With numbers significantly higher than event reports (as is typical), percentages here will be much smaller than seen above, but represent significant change.

As expected, the number of watches and warnings were higher than average this year. Perhaps the most notable thing is how large those numbers are. It seems summer keeps the folks at ECCC busy!

ECCC’s Bulletin

Below is the entirety of the bulletin issued by ECCC. As it was issued as a weather summary, it won’t remain on ECCC’s site past the day of issue.

Weather summary
for Manitoba
issued by Environment Canada
at 7:39 a.m. CST Wednesday 28 December 2016.

Discussion.

2016 Prairie Summer Severe Weather Season Summary 

This summary provides the severe weather report numbers for the 2016 
summer severe weather season on the Canadian Prairies (Alberta, 
Saskatchewan and Manitoba), focusing specifically on severe weather 
caused by thunderstorms between April and September. This summary 
also compares the 2016 season with the 30 year average (for 
tornadoes the 1980-2009 average is used). 

A severe thunderstorm event is the occurrence of one or more of: 
large hail (two centimetres or larger in diameter), heavy rain (50 
mm or more within one hour, strong winds (gusts of 90 km/h or 
greater, which could cause structural wind damage) or a tornado. 

Thunderstorms are the most frequent weather threat to life and 
property on the Canadian Prairies. The 2016 summer severe weather 
season was very active, and was longer than average. In 2016, there 
were 595 reported severe weather events from thunderstorms on the 
Prairies. There were 46 reported tornadoes, 368 severe hail reports, 
108 reports of severe winds and 40 reports of severe rainfall. Of 
the 46 reported tornadoes, 15 had associated damage. 

Summary of severe weather types for all 3 Prairie Provinces, by 
number of reports: 

Hail 
2016: 368 
30 year average: 129 

Wind 
2016: 108 
30 year average: 53 

Rain 
2016: 40 
30 year average: 24 

Tornadoes 
2016: 46 
1980-2009 average: 43 

All types 
2016: 595 
30 year average: 249 

Summary of severe weather types for Alberta, by number of reports: 

Hail 
2016: 144 
30 year average: 50 

Wind 
2016: 34 
30 year average: 18 

Rain 
2016: 11 
30 year average: 9 

Tornadoes 
2016: 14 
1980-2009 average: 15 

Summary of severe weather types for Saskatchewan, by number of 
reports: 

Hail 
2016: 77 
30 year average: 46 

Wind 
2016: 19 
30 year average: 21 

Rain 
2016: 9 
30 year average: 7 

Tornadoes 
2016: 14 
1980-2009 average: 18 

Summary of severe weather types for Manitoba, by number of reports: 

Hail 
2016: 147 
30 year average: 33 

Wind 
2016: 55 
30 year average: 14 

Rain 
2016: 20 
30 year average: 8 

Tornadoes 
2016: 18 
1980-2009 average: 10 

The Prairie and Arctic Storm Prediction Centre is responsible for 
thunderstorm watches and warnings for the three Prairie Provinces, 
as well as Nunavut and the Northwest Territories. These duties are 
shared between two offices, located in Edmonton and Winnipeg. The 
PASPC Edmonton and Winnipeg offices issued 3685 thunderstorm or 
tornado warnings and 1193 thunderstorm or tornado watches for the 
Prairies during the 2016 severe weather season. This was above the 
average (2005 to present) of 3036 warnings issued and 1067 watches 
issued. 

Summary of alert bulletins for all 3 Prairie Provinces, by number 
issued: 

2016 Warnings: 3685 
30 year average: 3036 

2016 Watches: 1193 
30 year average: 1067 

2016 total alert bulletins: 4878 
30 year average: 4103 

This summary contains all reports provided to the Prairie and Arctic 
Storm Prediction Centre as of December 2016. These data may be 
updated if new information surfaces. Unless otherwise noted, the 30 
year average is for the period from 1986 to 2015.

Please note that this summary may contain preliminary or unofficial 
information and does not constitute a complete or final report.

End/PASPC

For more information on this summer’s severe weather & variation from climatological normals in Manitoba, check out our State of the Climate – A Stormy Summer 2016 post.


  1. This is because Alberta is physically higher up than Saskatchewan or Manitoba, which when combined with the typically cooler temperatures aloft coming off of the Rockies, leads to significantly less distance for the hail to travel before reaching the ground. In Manitoba, the melting level is typically quite high off the ground, so hail has to travel through a greater depth of warmer air, resulting in a greater frequency of really big raindrops.

A Mixed Bag Heading Towards the New Year

Winnipeg will see a bit of a mixed bag over the next few days with some light flurries, some sun, and more accumulating snow on the way.

Today will bring some light flurries to the region as a weak disturbance moves out of the Red River Valley. Accumulations are expected to be minimal, and the light snow will taper off towards the afternoon as the clouds begin pushing off to the east, allowing a bit of sunshine through the afternoon in Winnipeg. Temperatures will be much milder than yesterday with highs near -4°C, but winds will be quite breezy out of the west to around 30 km/h.

Tonight will bring more cloud across the Red River Valley as temperatures drop to a low near -10°C with a northwest wind at 20-30 km/h.

For Thursday, Winnipeg will be under a weak ridge of high pressure. This will bring an end to the flurries, but won’t have enough “oomph” to actually completely clear things out. Skies will likely remain mixed—with perhaps some afternoon clearing—through the day. Temperatures will be a bit cooler than Wednesday with a high near -8°C. Thursday night will bring increasing cloud and a low near -16°C while winds pick up out of the southeast to around 20 km/h ahead of the next incoming weather system.

The NAM shows a swath of 2-3″ of snow (5-8cm) across Southern Manitoba on Friday.

An Alberta Clipper moving through on Friday will bring cloudy skies with snow that starts by mid-morning and persists through to the evening. Temperatures will climb to a high near -8°C with winds tapering off in the afternoon. By the time the snow stops, another 4-8 cm of the stuff will have fallen. Skies will remain mostly cloudy on Friday night with temperatures falling to a low near -17°C.

Long Range

The weekend is looking fairly seasonal for late December in Winnipeg. Saturday will bring mixed to mostly cloudy skies and a high around the -12°C mark. A disturbance moving through Saturday night will bring a chance of flurries and mark the start of a pattern change. Temperatures will slowly fall through the day on Sunday with a brisk northerly wind.

NAEFS 8-14 Day Temperature Anomaly Forecast — Valid January 3 – 10, 2017

Colder weather is on tap for next week as the Polar Vortex re-establishes itself over the central Canadian Arctic, allowing much colder air to slump southwards. Daytime highs next week will fall into the -20’s with overnight lows approaching -30°C.

This transition will mark a change that will likely persist through the first half of January. Although short1 warm-ups to near-seasonal values are possible, temperatures will largely be below-normal and quite cold.

Winnipeg’s seasonal daytime high is currently -12°C while the seasonal overnight low is -23°C.


  1. Perhaps a single day or so. 

Winnipeg Set To Receive A Blizzard for Christmas

The consensus is in: it seems overwhelmingly likely that Winnipeg will see a major winter storm bringing significant snow and blizzard conditions beginning midday on Christmas Day and persisting through Boxing Day.

The Lead-Up

Today and tomorrow will both be fairly benign days. Today will bring above-normal temperatures with a high near -4°C and light winds. A bit of cloud will be around but it should be a fairly sunny day overall. A weak cold front will swing through late this afternoon, bringing in northwesterly winds to around 20 km/h and cooler temperatures. The low tonight will drop to about -15°C with increasing cloud.

Tomorrow will be a mainly cloudy day with a much cooler high temperature near -12°C behind that cold front. Winds will continue out of the north to northeast at around 20 km/h. Temperatures will drop to a low near -15°C once agin on Saturday night with a good chance of light snow spreading into the Red River Valley from the southwest through the second half of the night.

Major Winter Storm For Christmas

The major story here is the significant winter storm set to impact Southern Manitoba on Christmas Day.

The system is currently develop off the western coast of North America. This satellite animation, taken from midnight last night, shows the long-wave trough that will evolve into a major winter storm beginning to dig southwards as it approaches the western United States. At this point, it looks like snow will intensify through the day on Sunday, with the most potent part of the storm impacting the Red River Valley roughly from 12PM Christmas Day through 12PM Boxing Day.

If you have travel plans for Christmas Day or Boxing Day, this storm will almost certainly disrupt them.

Christmas Day will start with some light snow over the Red River Valley that will intensify rapidly midday as a very potent low pressure system lifts northwards into North Dakota & Minnesota. The heaviest snow will move in by Sunday evening and persist until late Monday morning. By all indications, the snow will be relentless on Sunday night with rapid accumulations. Through this period, the wind will also be increasing out of the northeast to 40-50 km/h. The heavy snow overnight combined with strong winds will produce blizzard conditions through the Red River Valley with zero or near-zero visibilities. There is a high likelihood that most highways will be closed through the night.

The wind and snow will taper off on Monday. Fortunately, without a potent high pressure system building in from the northwest, a weak trough line hanging back across the province from the low will break up the strong winds. This should limit the period of worst travel conditions, with it seeming likely that by Monday afternoon highway travel will be possible again, although likely still slow.

AWM Snowfall Outlook for December 25-26, 2016

When all is said and done, the snowfall from this system should be quite impressive. Widespread amounts of 15-30 cm will be seen across the region, with areas south of a line running roughly from Pilot Mound through Winnipeg and Pinawa having the chance of seeing snowfall totals creep above 30 cm. At this point it looks like 30-35 cm would be the upper end of the potential snowfall totals, but there is high confidence in amounts of 20-30 cm.

Light snow and flurries may linger through the remainder of boxing day before gradually tapering off overnight or early on the 27th.

Winnipeg’s seasonal daytime high is currently -12°C while the seasonal overnight low is -22°C.

Mild Second Half of Week; Major Winter Storm Threatens Christmas

Temperatures will remain above-normal through the second half of the week in what has been an extremely abrupt transition from 10 days of below-normal temperatures when the temperature soared 29°C from a low of -30.5°C on Sunday morning to a high of -1.5°C on Monday afternoon. Other than some brief snow early today, the remainder of the work week will be quite pleasant with a fair amount of sunshine on tap. Christmas, however, may end up being notably worse with a second major snowstorm for December possible.

This morning will bring some light snow to Winnipeg as a shortwave rolls through the Red River Valley. The snow should taper off by mid-morning with accumulations anywhere from 1-2 cm along the Trans-Canada Highway up to 5-6 cm near the U.S. border. As the snow moves out, the cloud will break up and we’ll head into a fairly sunny afternoon with a high near -7°C. Winds will become westerly behind the low to around 20-30 km/h with some gusts on top of that. Expect the winds to continue overnight as skies remain mainly clear and temperatures drop just a couple degrees to a low near -9°C.

Thursday will be a beautiful December day with just a few clouds around and a high near -2°C. Winds will continue at 20-30 km/h, however they will be more southwesterly than westerly. Winnipeg will see a bit of overnight cloud as temperatures dip to a low near -8°C.

Winds will continue out of the west to southwest on Friday as temperatures climb to a high near -5°C under partly cloudy to mixed skies. Skies will be mixed to cloudy on Friday night with a low near -14°C.

Christmas Blizzard Possible

Long-range models have been very consistent in producing a very potent winter storm over Southern Manitoba, the Dakotas, and Minnesota beginning overnight on Christmas Eve and continuing through Christmas Day and into Boxing Day.

There is still significant uncertainty in areas that will be impacted by this storm. The only confidence at this point is that a major winter storm will likely occur somewhere in Central North America on Christmas.

While the location of the system differs between models, a common theme is that all are forecasting 20-50 cm of snow in the worst-hit areas of the storm.

Shown here are the Canadian (GDPS) and American (GFS) long-range forecasts for snowfall accumulated in a 24 hour period between 6AM Christmas Day and 6AM on Boxing Day. Both systems have a core of heavy snowfall greater than 30 cm, however where that occurs is in different places and across varying swath widths.

In general, I’m more partial to the GDPS solution as it creates a sharp deformation zone along the northern track of this system (which tends to happen) and concentrates the heaviest snow through a smaller corridor. Both these features are more physically realistic. That does not mean that I think the GDPS is right, though. Just that it seems to have a slightly more realistic handle on this system. Should the GDPS solution come to fruition, the biggest challenge would be where exactly that northern edge of the precipitation sets up.

While it’s too early to suggest any concrete plans, it would be prudent to have a “Plan B” ready if your Christmas involves travel. The heavy snow will be accompanied by strong northerly winds, likely producing widespread blizzard conditions. In areas hit by this storm, highway travel will likely be nearly impossible and air travel will likely be heavily delayed or cancelled. It seems fairly likely that travel through North Dakota and Northern Minnesota will be hazardous to impossible on Christmas Day. If you are scheduled to travel on Christmas day, it may be prudent to bump your travel day up to the 24th instead of the 25th, particularly if you’re travelling to the United States. Travel conditions will likely improve in the second half of the day on Boxing day.

If this storm materializes, it would be just 19 days after the worst winter storm in nearly a decade dumped 25-40 cm of snow across the region. Having two snow storms that produce over 20 cm of snow in a single month is rare; the last time there were two events of that magnitude was December of 1909, when the first 7 days of the month produced 70.9 cm with snowfalls between 5-19 cm each day.

We’ll be watching this storm as it develops and have a full weekend forecast on Friday.

Winnipeg’s seasonal daytime high is currently -11°C while the seasonal overnight low is -21°C.