In portions of Halifax and central Nova Scotia, as an estimated 250 millimetres of rain fell last weekend, similar confusion and improvisation was unfolding, in what some experts say is the latest example of the province's inadequate state of preparation for climate disasters. The mayor of the Municipality of West Hants has said many residents reported they didn't receive any emergency alert at all because of the area's spotty cellular service.
'Waves onto my front porch'; $17M investment to prevent climate disasters in Port Stanley
Spencer Noble knows all about the flooding issues on William St. in Port Stanley, Ont. Whenever there is a large rain, he gets a few feet of water on the street in front of his home. "The water comes right up, hits the steps, and when a car comes by it sends waves onto the front porch," says Noble. “We've played in it, and even brought a canoe across the street to the bar, and boogie boarded in the road."
B.C. flood recovery tempered by fears of new climate disasters looming on horizon
When a dike was breached and floodwaters started to flow across British Columbia’s Sumas Prairie a year ago, poultry farmer Corry Spitters said all he could do was let nature take its course. A feeling of helplessness gripped him as the encroaching water methodically engulfed his farm’s 21 barns, and 200,000 of his chickens drowned, he said. “You stand there and Mother Nature takes control,” said Spitters, 67. “What can you do? The water comes in and there’s nothing you can do.”
Catastrophe experts say retreat from flood risk is 'critical option'
All climate disasters are not created equal and the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction recommends retreat in the face of only one type of threat. "In our opinion, retreat is not an option that is important for most climate hazards in Canada. The hazard where retreat is really important and quite viable and a critical option involves flooding," executive director Paul Kovacs said.
Climate disasters and warming heighten urgency of city's water conservation efforts
It’s sheer coincidence last summer’s severe Prairie drought and climate change-related disasters in B.C. immediately preceded a major review of Calgary’s water management policies, says the person leading it. But those realities only make the assessment of the city’s drought management practices more urgent and will colour its conduct, said Harpreet Sandhu, the city’s watershed strategy leader.