Heavy storm dumps 34 cm of snow in Ottawa, grounds flights in Canada: video
Heavy snowfall has covered Quebec, Ontario and surrounding areas in Canada, affecting air travel across the country.
On February 16, 2025, Canada’s The Weather Network reported that a significant winter storm had hit southern and eastern Quebec. Montreal and Sherbrooke are expected to receive the most snow, with a total of 30–40 centimeters possible by the morning of February 17, 2025. Residents in Gatineau and Quebec City may see 20–30 centimeters of snow by the end of the storm.
Ontario has also experienced another snowstorm, adding to an already snow trodden region. According to The Weather Network, it is the third winter storm in just eight days in the area. As of February 16, 2025, at 16:00 local time, Toronto recorded 26 centimeters of snow, while Ottawa had received 34 centimeters.
Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ) announced on X that many flights were delayed or cancelled on February 16, 2025, due to the storm, with delays expected to persist into the next day. The latest forecast shows that the airport received an additional 15 centimeters of snow as of January 16, 2025.
“In total, we’ve had 53.6 centimeters of snow this past week,” Toronto Airport officials said on X. “To put that into perspective, that’s more than the 47.6 centimeters we got in January, December, and November, combined.”
Video footage was shared on X as the snowstorm arrived, depicting locals filming the airport covered in snow and snow ploughs busy clearing the heavy drifts.
Pearson International Airport #Toronto #SnowStorm #ONStorm pic.twitter.com/gb7GADw455— SafaS (@SafaSadri) February 16, 2025 On February 16, 2025, FlightAware reported 174 flight cancellations and 283 delays at Toronto Airport. As of February 17, 2025, the airport has seen 29 cancellations and 27 delays so far.
Montréal Trudeau International Airport (YUL) experienced 96 cancellations and 93 delays on February 16, 2025, followed by 25 cancellations and 21 delays the next day so far. Meanwhile, Ottawa Macdonald–Cartier International Airport (YOW) saw 44 cancellations and 31 delays on the first day of the storm.
Erica Vella, a spokesperson for Toronto Airport, told local media that crew at the airport have been working to clear snow from the runways since the storm began, using more than 160 pieces of equipment. The post Heavy storm dumps 34 cm of snow in Ottawa, grounds flights in Canada: video appeared first on AeroTime.
Heavy snowfall has covered Quebec, Ontario and surrounding areas in Canada, affecting air travel across the country. On…
The post Heavy storm dumps 34 cm of snow in Ottawa, grounds flights in Canada: video appeared first on AeroTime.