Science

Why it's flooding in Ontario and Quebec

Residents of western Quebec and parts of Ontario are bracing for a deluge of rain that could make flooding worse, and the storm system responsible for the wet conditions is expected to reach New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Friday night, Environment Canada says.

Slow-moving storm 'has a lot of time to dump a lot of rain'

An abandoned car in Point Gatineau. Western Quebec and southern Ontario will likely see more flooding as a storm system moves through. (CBC Ottawa)

Residents of western Quebec and parts of Ontario are bracing for a deluge of rain that could make flooding worse, and the storm system responsible for the wet conditions is expected to reach New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Friday night, Environment Canada says.

The flood problems are due to a number of things:

  • Higher than normal water levels in Lake Ontario.
  • Higher than normal precipitation.
  • Atmospheric conditions that are making the storm system moving up from the Gulf of Mexico a particularly slow-moving one.

Put these things all together and you have a perfect storm, so to speak.

"It's tracking northeastward very slowly, which is one of the problems," Peter Kimbell, warning preparedness meteorologist with Environment Canada said of the system. "Because it is such a slow-moving system, it has a lot of time to dump a lot of rain."

Rain is expected to fall across southern Ontario through to Saturday, Kimbell said. Regions can expect anywhere from 30 to 70 millimetres of rain over the next 24 to 36 hours.

Making things worse

Quebec has already faced flooding in Gatineau, Rigaud and Montreal. Twenty-five homes on Île Verte, a small island that is part of the city of Laval, are under an evacuation order. More than 100 communities in the province have been affected by the threat of rising water levels.

On Thursday, McGill University professor Frédéric Fabry, who researches precipitation physics at the university's department of atmospheric and oceanic sciences, told CBC's Daybreak that warm temperatures, followed by a quick melt of the snow pack and heavy rains have contributed to the Quebec flooding.

Parts of Toronto Island Park are still under water after a heavy rains fell earlier this week. Toronto could see up to 70 mm of new rainfall by Saturday. (Lauren Pelley/CBC)

"That water is finally beginning to arrive near the St. Lawrence River, following the major tributaries of the St. Lawrence River — the Ottawa River, the Saint-Maurice River and all these others," Fabry​ said.

'Rain, rain and more rain'

Ottawa and Montreal had almost double the average precipitation for the month of April. And that's together with snow melt. In many areas the ground is just saturated, unable to absorb any more water.

The flooding in Gatineau, Que., is the worst it has been in 20 years. (Ashley Burke/CBC)

"The ground has pretty much taken all the water it can," said Frank Seglenieks, water resources engineer with Environment and Climate Change Canada.

When the ground is saturated, it forces water into rivers, which can cause the flow to change quickly making them dangerous, Seglenieks said.

Meanwhile, in Toronto, officials have discussed the possible evacuation of Toronto Island. That's because the Lake Ontario water level is higher than it has been in more than 20 years, according to Environment Canada.

In March, the level was 32 centimetres above the monthly average and just three centimetres above last year's. But then came April.

A dog walker steps carefully around the shores of swollen Lake Ontario in Toronto. After a wet weekend and with more rain coming, the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority has issued a flood watch for the city. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

"The reason why we've had these water levels is for three reasons: rain rain and more rain," Seglenieks told CBC News. "And wherever you've been in southwestern Ontario, depending on the location, you might have had 1½ to two times more precipitation than you would have in the average month of April."

Part of the reason the precipitation levels have been so high is due to the meandering nature of the jet stream, a path of air in the upper atmosphere. Often storm systems are influenced by it. It's normally somewhat smooth, but recently it's had more "kinks" in it, resulting in wetter systems and sometimes allowing storms to linger where they'd normally just pass through. While it's too early to definitively link this weather system with climate change, recent studies have suggested it could be a sign of things to come.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nicole Mortillaro

Senior Science Reporter

Based in Toronto, Nicole covers all things science for CBC News. As an amateur astronomer, Nicole can be found looking up at the night sky appreciating the marvels of our universe. She is the editor of the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and the author of several books. In 2021, she won the Kavli Science Journalism Award from the American Association for the Advancement of Science for a Quirks and Quarks audio special on the history and future of Black people in science. You can send her story ideas at [email protected].

With files from CBC News