HALIFAX — An enormous winter storm is predicted to descend on components of Ontario and Quebec tonight and shortly unfold throughout the Atlantic area on Thursday and Friday, prompting Surroundings Canada to challenge a flurry of climate warnings.
HALIFAX — An enormous winter storm is predicted to descend on components of Ontario and Quebec tonight and shortly unfold throughout the Atlantic area on Thursday and Friday, prompting Surroundings Canada to challenge a flurry of climate warnings.
Snowfall warnings have been issued for the southern half of Quebec and a big portion of Ontario, stretching from the Temiskaming-Temagami area within the north to the Sarnia space within the south.
As effectively, the federal climate company says as much as 25 centimetres of snow is predicted throughout central and northern New Brunswick, with snowfall charges reaching as much as 4 centimetres per hour.
In the meantime, residents of Nova Scotia are being warned to organize for energy outages and treacherous driving circumstances because the snow is predicted to vary to ice pellets and intervals of freezing rain on Thursday afternoon, adopted by a changeover to rain in southern sections of the province.
In P.E.I., between 15 and 20 cm of snow is predicted on the west facet of the Island, with ice pellets and freezing rain coating jap and central areas on Thursday night.
In Newfoundland, blowing snow is forecast for the Friday morning commute, with as much as 25 cm of snow within the western fringe of the island and lesser quantities farther east.
This report by The Canadian Press was first printed Feb. 12, 2025.
The Canadian Press








