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Manitoba

Winnipeg swings from historic drought last year to wettest year on record in 2022

Historic drought devastated Manitoba's agricultural and farming sectors last year only for the pendulum to swing strongly in the other direction this year.

Meteorologist confident extremes tied to climate change as 739 mm of precipitation recorded in Winnipeg

A rainy picture of a person holding an umbrella is shown.
A man walks down a sidewalk carrying an umbrella during a period of heavy rain earlier this year. On Monday, Winnipeg topped its annual precipitation record. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Historic drought devastated Manitoba's agricultural and farming sectors last year only for the pendulum to swing strongly in the other, wetterdirection this year in Winnipeg.

As of Monday morning,the Winnipeg James ArmstrongRichardson InternationalAirport weather station had recorded over 739 millimetres of precipitation in the city, "making this the wettest year for precipitation totals," said Environment Canada meteorologist Natalie Hasell.

The 33.3 mm of rain that fell early Monday morning pushedtotals into record territory, she said.

The previous recordset in 1962was 723 mm, and the last time the city came close to that mark was in 2010 when 721 mm was recorded, said Hasell.

CBC Manitoba meteorologist John Sauder said it was clear the record was within reach weeks ago, evenas October prior to Mondaywas relatively mild in terms of moisture. The 33.3 mm that fellMonday morning is more than twice as much precipitation as the province received all month before then.

Total precipitation is a reflection of all rain and snowfall amounts, so the record is partly a reflection of large amounts of snow early this year and a soppy spring. That followed a year of historic drought through the Prairies last year.

Those twoopposites happening in the span of a year or so can be linked to climate change, said Sauder, who noted it's difficult at times to link weather to broader climate trends.

"Climate is something we study over a longer period of time, but what we're noticing now is storms are more severe, weather events are more severe," he said. "Things like drought, and then the wettest year on record ... we're going to start to see more of the extremes."

With two months left in 2022, the record will only grow from here.

"This is now a record wettest year, but this may go down as a record that stands for a really long time," said Sauder.

Hasell said Environment Canada forecasts suggest over the next month a number parts of Manitoba can expect higher than normal precipitation amounts.

"I would take advantage of the weather we see on Friday and the weekend to get ready for the next season," she said.

With files from Marjorie Dowhos