Three of five fatalities in Ontario were caused by falling trees, according to the Toronto Star. It also reported that one woman died when her boat capsized on the Ottawa River. Details about an additional fatality in Ottawa had not yet been released, the Star wrote.
“My thoughts go out to both of their families & friends and I offer condolences on behalf of all Ontarians,” Ottawa Premier Doug Ford tweeted Saturday evening.
Several of the deaths underscore a common theme in severe wind events: Those participating in outdoor activities are particularly vulnerable to violent wind gusts. The US Storm Prediction Center website says that “those involved in outdoor activities are especially at risk,” particularly “campers or hikers in forested areas,” who “are vulnerable to being injured or killed by falling trees.”
Widespread damage to trees and power infrastructure also dealt a hefty blow to electrical distribution in the urban corridor. As of Saturday evening, power outage aggregator PowerOutage.com listed about 925,000 outages in Quebec and Ontario, a massive event for a country with just over 38 million citizens. On Sunday morning PowerOutage.com still reported nearly 700,000 customers without power.
Emergency crews responded to more than 500 calls on Saturday for downed power lines, fires, fallen trees and damaged buildings, CTV Ottawa reported.
The storm complex almost certainly qualified as a derecho, or a thunderstorm complex that produces extremely powerful wind gusts across a wide swath. The effects from a derecho’s violent winds are often comparable to those of hurricanes. Derechos are fairly common in the Lower 48 states but are more rare north of the border and seldom affect such densely populated corridors.
Derechos often strike along the northern periphery of heat domes, where conditions are ripe for powerful thunderstorms. Indeed, very unusual early-season heat swelled over eastern North America on Saturday, with numerous cities in the eastern United States setting records.
The combination of this heat with moisture pulled north from the Gulf of Mexico encouraged extreme atmospheric instability, or fuel for thunderstorms, in eastern Canada. The storms erupted as this hot, moist air was met by a strong cold front marching eastward. This was the same cold front that caused temperatures in Denver to plunge by more than 50 degrees in 24 hours and helped spawned the deadly tornado in Gaylord, Mich.
Historically, far southeast Canada sees approximately one derecho event every four years, according to the Storm Prediction Center. But Saturday’s event was unusually far northeast and hit at an uncommon time of year; many Canadian derechos have struck in July or August.
The unusual characteristics of Saturday’s derecho may have been representative of a climate change-related trend in the location of such damaging thunderstorm events. According to the Storm Prediction Center website“The corridors of maximum derecho frequency likely would shift poleward with time” as warm homes of high pressure expand north under global warming.