Snowstorms complicate hopes for Rideau Canal skating season - Action News
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Ottawa

Snowstorms complicate hopes for Rideau Canal skating season

An engineer who researches the canal ice says temperatures are looking promising for the skating season, but repeated snowstorms aren't helping.

3rd significant snowfall in a week could insulate ice, compromise quality

A person in a red coat walks on a path beside a snowed-over canal.
A pedestrian walks along a path beside the Rideau Canal in Ottawa on Wednesday. The Rideau Canal Skateway remains closed for now. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

A decent temperature forecastshould help thicken the ice on the Rideau Canal next week, but repeated snow dumps could delay effortsto open the skatewaywith Winterlude now three weeks away.

Shawn Kenny, an engineering professor at Carleton University, was out on DowsLake this week taking measurements. He's finding the icethickness varies between about 10 and 15 centimetres.

The ice needs to be at least 30 centimetres thick before the canalcan open safely and even thicker if the quality is poor.

Ottawa's temperature topped 0 C nine times in 14 days between Dec. 24 and Jan. 6. Kenny foundthe unusually warm weather didn't thin the ice, though it certainly didn't help thicken it: the measurements were about the same before and after Christmas.

Next week's forecastis bringing temperatures that should be favourable to ice formation, with nights at least10 C, if not a few degrees colder, and daytime highs not much warmer than that10 C benchmark.

"We are having below zero constant values, so that would bode well," Kenny said."Under ideal conditions, without any influence of rain or snow, then that would be close to sufficient."

But conditions are not ideal.

Snow 'a very good insulator'

Ottawa's international airport recorded about 13 centimetres of snow Saturday and Sunday, then another nine centimetres Tuesday followed by freezing rain and rain.

Fifteen to 25 more centimetres of snow are forecast Friday night and Saturday morning.

Rain isn't great for freezing the ice, but snow is much worse.

"Snow is a very good insulator and it creates problems on the surface flooding techniques that are used," said Kenny.

He's also concerned that the snow could affect the quality of the ice.

"Prior to the snowstorm the ice quality was very good, mostly clear, some areas where it had white ice or snow ice, but predominantly pretty good quality," he said.

"Now it's going to be relatively poor."

Someone walks beside a closed gate to a frozen waterway.
For the first time in its five-decade history, the Rideau Canal Skateway, seen here in February 2023, remained closed last winter. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

The National Capital Commission (NCC) continues to monitorand assessice conditions, according tospokesperson Sofia Benjelloun.She saidthe NCCwas planning to floodthe ice between the Pretoria Bridge and Concord Streeton Thursday night.

"We will then reassess the conditions and next steps after the snow forecasted this weekend," she said.

Kenny won't venture any predictions for when the canal could be ready for skating, since another snowstorm would "throw a wrench in the mix again."

The skateway, a major cultural and tourism attraction for the area,didn't open last season for the first time in its now 53-year history. Mild, snowy and rainy weather was to blame, the NCC said.

Turning to technology

Kenny and hisstudents are looking at ways to conquer the snow through technology. They developed a snowblowerrobot that can venture onto the snow when it's too thin for humans.

In the future, they're considering fitting the robotwith radar that could measure ice thickness at the same time.

Those efforts are vital to preserving the canal as a skateway given that humans burning greenhouses gases have warmed the planet, disrupting weather patterns.

Canada is on average nearly two degrees warmer than it was 75 years ago and climate change is likely to make Ottawa winters both warmer and wetter.

According to an NCCreport, February starts to the skateway season could become the norm, while skating seasons of 40 days or more will become the exception by 2050.

"As climate change continues, if we see more frequent mixtures of snow and rain events, then that will guide us toward different adaptation strategies than if we have a lower emissions scenario," said Kenny.