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British Columbia

Slight hope for dreams of a white Christmas in Vancouver

Although the odds are usually stacked against a snowy Vancouver Christmas, cooler air and an unsettled pattern means we've got a shot.

So you're saying there's a chance?

What's the chance of a white Christmas?

9 years ago
Duration 2:02
CBC meteorologist Johanna Wagstaffe spells it out.

If you thought dreaming of a white Christmas here in Vancouver was, well, just a dream,there is some slight hope this year.

A strongEl Niothis winter means temperatures have and will continue to average above seasonal.Vancouver has actually seen the warmest first two weeks of December ever on record, with average daytime highs above 10 C.

But over the next week, a cooler air mass will stayin place across much of the province. Add to that an unsettled weather pattern, with rounds of showers and rain moving in from the west all week.

If early-morning temperatures get close enough to 0 C, then Vancouver may just see some flakes fly on Christmas Day.

El Nio is keeping much of the country mild this winter, but there are a few possible exceptions for Christmas day. (Johanna Wagstaffe/CBC)

So what are the odds?

Environment Canada has also crunched the numbers on the odds in any given year of seeing the good stuff on the ground Christmas day.

Based on the data from 1955 to 2013, there is a 10 per centchance in any given year. With a changing climate though, that chance has increased to 15 per centwith just the data from 1994 onwards.

While most of Canada's odds have decreased in the past 20 years due to a warming climate, on the coasts they have actually increased because of changing storm tracks.

While it's stilllikely that any flurries Vancouver gets onChristmas day will change over to rain by the afternoon,one thing's for sure there's a 100 per centchance of snow for our mountains.

Boxing Day shoppers both inside and outside head out in snowy Vancouver, British Columbia December 26, 2008. At the time, this was the fourth white Christmas in 50 years. (Andy Clark/Reuters)

White Christmas definition

Technically the official definition of a White Christmas from Environment Canada is twocentimetres of snow on the ground, measured at 7 a.m. on Christmas Day.

Yes, there is actually an officialgovernment definition.

Since 1955, there has only been a white Christmas four times inVancouver.