Canadian city struggles with late summer snowfall

Published September 11, 2014
Calgary (canada): A resident jumps out of the way of a falling tree branch during a summer snow storm here on Wednesday. Roads are blocked with fallen trees from the heavy snow, over 30,000 people are without power and the city has opened its emergency operation centre in the city.—Reuters
Calgary (canada): A resident jumps out of the way of a falling tree branch during a summer snow storm here on Wednesday. Roads are blocked with fallen trees from the heavy snow, over 30,000 people are without power and the city has opened its emergency operation centre in the city.—Reuters

CALGARY: The Canadian city of Calgary, Alberta, home to much of the country’s oil and gas industry, suffered through a late-summer snowfall on Wednesday that snarled traffic, downed trees and cut power to dozens of neighbourhoods.

Nestled in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, the city of 1.2 million is used to bizarre weather and heavy snowfalls are common in the winter months.

But the early September storm, which has so far dumped as much as 35 centimeters (14 inches) of snow since Monday, is unusually early and especially damaging because the wet, heavy snow is landing on trees still thick with leaves.

“About every decade we get a significant snow event (in September),” said Bill McMurtry, a meteorologist with Environment Canada, the country’s national weather service.

“This one will probably be seen as one of the worst ones, just because it happened so early in the month and we have not had a killing frost ... so we’re going to see some major impacts.” While damage from the snow won’t rival the flood that swept through the city in 2013 causing as much as C$1.7 billion ($1.55bn) in damages, the city’s traffic was snarled and falling branches from trees landed on cars and brought down power lines.

While many flights at the city’s airport, a major regional hub, were delayed, there were few major impacts from the storm, the Calgary Airport Authority said. Still Air Canada warned travelers that flights could be delayed or canceled due to the storm. The snow was also heavy enough to flatten wheat, barley and some canola crops in parts of Alberta, which produces nearly 40 per cent of Canada’s spring wheat and canola.

Published in Dawn, September 11th, 2014

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