Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Twisted Weather: Alberta Ahead Of Average Tornado Count At 17 So Far This Year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jul, 2019 08:57 PM
  • Twisted Weather: Alberta Ahead Of Average Tornado Count At 17 So Far This Year

EDMONTON - Alberta storm chaser Chris Kiernan has hardly had a moment's rest since the start of the tornado season last month.

 

"This season has been quite more active," said Kiernan, who is based out of Beaumont, Alta., about 30 kilometres south of Edmonton.

 

"In the last two weeks, I have been out for the majority of the days and I have landed some pretty good storms."

 

Kiernan said there are usually a lot of "bust days" with no storm activity in a target area, but so far that's happened just a single time this year.

 

"To have it only once is something for me," he said. "Usually, there is a 40 per cent bust rate."

 

There have been 17 probable or confirmed tornadoes in the province so far, said Kyle Fougere, meteorologist for Environment and Climate Change Canada. That number surpasses Alberta's 30-year average of 12.

 

The agency reported earlier this week that there had been 18 tornadoes, but Fougere said Tuesday one of those had been downgraded.

"When we first get reports of a tornado, we'll consider them a possible report and then we'll either upgrade them to a probable tornado or even a confirmed tornado."

 

The highest number of tornadoes in Alberta in the last 35 years has been 26 in 1988, Fourgere said.

 

Overall on the Prairies, there have been 34 twisters this year, he said, with several weeks left in the tornado season.

 

There have been 13 in Saskatchewan, which has an average of 18 a year. Manitoba, with an average of 10, has had four.

 

Alberta has been the hardest hit because of wet weather since mid-June, Fougere said.

 

"When you have a trough of low pressure, you have colder air aloft and you tend to have very showery precipitation with a lot of thunderstorms," he said. "Because we have had so many days with this thunderstorm activity, we've ended up with more tornadoes."

 

A high-pressure system with more summerlike temperatures has moved through the area, but more tornadoes could still be on the way, Fougere predicted.

 

"It's certainly like we will see more," he said. "We definitely have that pattern on the horizon."

 

Environment and Climate Change Canada rated a tornado that hit the southern Alberta community of Carmangay last week as an EF1, Fougere said, but it could be upgraded.

 

A tornado is rated EF1 when it packs winds of 138 to 177 km/h and causes moderate damage. The highest rating is EF5.

 

"We are still investigating some of these tornadoes. A lot of times we do get information that comes in later and we do change some of the ratings."

 

He added that the most significant tornado activity to happen this year was in central Alberta and western Saskatchewan between June 28 and 29.

 

There were nine confirmed tornadoes in the area for those two days and there's a possibility the weather agency will confirm more.

 

There's been activity further north too.

 

Fougere said there was an EF1 tornado on June 2 in the Fort Smith area of the Northwest Territories — the fourth tornado ever reported in the territory.

 

"A lot of these storms form over areas that do not have much population density, so we don't get reports of it," Fougere said. "It's estimated that we get many more tornadoes than we actually have reported."

 

Kiernan, who helps run the Alberta Storm Chasers Facebook page, said he has seen more interest in the hobby this year because of all the unsettled weather.

 

He warns that novice storm chasers should know there are risks.

 

"Every once in a while they'll land something they weren't prepared to deal with and don't have escape routes or anything, so it's always important to do your research before you head out."

MORE National ARTICLES

Trump Promises Help With Canadian Detainees In China As Trudeau Visits D.C.

U.S. President Donald Trump says he will raise the issue of two Canadians being detained in China when he meets with the Chinese president next week, if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wants him to.

Trump Promises Help With Canadian Detainees In China As Trudeau Visits D.C.

Report Finds Many Birds In Decline But Co-operation Works To Rebuild Populations

Report Finds Many Birds In Decline But Co-operation Works To Rebuild Populations
The bad news is that the populations of more than one-quarter of Canada's bird species are declining, many rapidly.

Report Finds Many Birds In Decline But Co-operation Works To Rebuild Populations

Trudeau Welcoming Raptors, But Trump Uncertain For White House Visit

WASHINGTON — While plans are underway for the Toronto Raptors to meet Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a White House visit for the NBA champions is uncertain.

Trudeau Welcoming Raptors, But Trump Uncertain For White House Visit

New Study Proves Extinct Hyenas Reached North America Via Bering Land Bridge

WHITEHORSE — Two teeth that were sitting in a Canadian museum for almost 50 years have become proof that ice-aged hyenas once roamed Yukon.

New Study Proves Extinct Hyenas Reached North America Via Bering Land Bridge

Inhumane Practice Of Carving Fins Off Live Sharks To Become Illegal In Canada

OTTAWA — Carving fins off live sharks and leaving them in the ocean to drown will be illegal in Canada as early as Friday.

Inhumane Practice Of Carving Fins Off Live Sharks To Become Illegal In Canada

Quebec's Biggest French School Board Postpones Applying Religious Symbols Law

MONTREAL — Quebec's largest school board has voted to delay application of Quebec's controversial new secularism law for at least a year to allow for consultations with parents, unions and other stakeholders.    

Quebec's Biggest French School Board Postpones Applying Religious Symbols Law