Tropical storm Philippe will bring ugly weather to the Maritimes this weekend - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Tropical storm Philippe will bring ugly weather to the Maritimes this weekend

Post-tropical storm Philippe is expected to bring strong winds and heavy rain to the Maritimes from Saturday afternoon to Sunday afternoon.

More than 50 millimetres of rain forecast to fall across the region

Heavy rain will bring the risk of localized flooding Friday and Saturday.
Tropical storm Philippe is expected to bring heavy rain and strong winds to the Maritimes over the weekend. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

Heavy rain and strong winds are in the forecast for the three Maritime provinces this weekend as tropical storm Philippe makes its way toward Canadian waters.

Environment Canada has issued special weather statements for New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, saying 50 millimetres of rain or more will fall across the region between Saturday afternoon and Sunday afternoon.

On Thursday night, CBC meteorologist Jay Scotland saidPhilippe wasabout600 kilometressouth-southwest of Bermuda, and was moving north at 22 kilometres per hour.

"Philippe will continue to move north, before merging with a trough of low pressure and transitioning to post-tropical this weekend. Looking at the latest track, Philippe could move onshore anywhere from southern Nova Scotia through southern New Brunswick to Maine late Saturday into early Sunday," Scotland said.

As well, the latest forecast is calling for winds gusting up to 80 kilometres per hour over exposed areas in all three provinces.

"The windy side of the storm is expected to spread over Nova Scotia with the higher winds expected over the western part of the province," Environment Canadasaid in a tropical cyclone information statement released Thursday afternoon.

A map of the United States and Canada with a red line showing Philippe's track over it.
A timeline and track of Philippe as it moves toward the Maritimes. (Jay Scotland/CBC)

"Philippe is currently only a weak tropical storm but is expected to intensify as it moves northward. Some computer models indicate that there is a possibility (10 per cent chance) it could strengthen to hurricane status so the [Canadian Hurricane Centre]will monitor that aspect and provide updates."

The centre says Philippe is expected pass the western edge of Nova Scotia as a post-tropical storm around 3 a.m. on Sunday, before heading inland near the New Brunswick-Maine border. Most of the rain from the storm is expected to fall over Maine.

Meteorologists say Philippe will interact with a large, low-pressure system over Quebec and New England, possibly resulting in a rain and wind storm spanning from Ontario to Newfoundland.

A map showing Nova Scotia, Maine and New Brunswick. A section of the Maine map is yellow, while the other parts are green. The yellow indiciates stronger rain.
Maine is looking likely to get the heaviest rainfall Saturday night as Philippe blows through. (Jay Scotland/CBC)

"Separate weather statements are or soon will be in effect for many areas, including Quebec," the centre said.

Scotland saidPhilippe's strong winds will extend well beyond the storm's centre, with peak gusts from 60 kilometres per hour to over 100 kilometres per hour possible across all three maritime provinces. He said the strongest winds will be from the east to southeast.

"Due to these high winds, outages are possible Saturday night and Sunday. While Philippe's coastal impact is not looking to be as severe as we saw with Lee, elevated water levels and pounding surf are possible," Scotland said.

Prepare for power outages as tropical storm Philippe approaches Maritimes this weekend

1 year ago
Duration 2:14
Meteorologist Jay Scotland says the storm is expected to bring strong winds and heavy rain to the Maritimes Saturday afternoon to Sunday afternoon, but he says the heaviest rainfall will likely be in Maine.

The storm's track was expected to be similar to that of post-tropical storm Lee, which battered the Maritimes almost three weeks ago, pulling down trees, flooding shoreline roads and knocking out power to more than 300,000 homes and businesses in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

"Elevated water levels and rough surf can be expected along parts of the Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia impacted by Hurricane Lee but impacts from Philippe are looking like they will be much less," the hurricane centre said.

On Thursday night,Nova Scotia Power announced it would be activating its Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) on Saturday ahead of the storm.

"We are taking every precaution and will have crews in place and working to respond safely and as quickly as possible," said Matt Drover, Nova Scotia Power's storm preparedness lead.

Drover is encouraging customers to have theiremergency kits stocked and ready.

With files from Jay Scotland