Ice Storm in Canada: Hundreds of Thousands of Homes Still Without Power in Eastern Canada

The ice storm hit Quebec and Ontario, the two most populous provinces in Canada, as early as Wednesday, causing the death of at least two people and extensive property damage. Two days after its passage, 630,000 Quebec households were still without electricity, Friday April 7 in the morning.

While more than a million homes were without power at the height of the event, “we have restored power to just over a third of those affected by the outages caused by the ice storm,” the supplier said. of Hydro-Quebec electricity.

If the company estimated to be able to restore power for the majority of customers by midnight, “we know that for some customers it will last until Sunday, potentially Monday”, however said Régis Tellier, spokesperson of Hydro-Quebec. “More favorable weather conditions” as the day progresses should “accelerate the restoration of service”, he added.

About half of the outages concern the city of Montreal

By then, the city of Montreal, which lists about half of the breakdowns, has opened six temporary emergency accommodation centers, where residents without electricity have spent the night. These centers remained accessible during the day to those wishing to warm up on the first day of the long Easter weekend.

“We are very satisfied with the management of the crisis by Hydro-Québec”, for his part welcomed the Minister of the Economy and Energy of Quebec, Pierre Fitzgibbon, during a press briefing.

This is the biggest outage on Quebec’s power grid since the 1998 ice storm, which plunged the province into chaos for several weeks.

Since the start of the storm, two people have died: a resident of eastern Ontario, killed by a falling tree on Wednesday, and a 60-something in Quebec, fatally injured by a branch while trying to clear his garden , THURSDAY.

On Friday, hundreds of Montreal employees were still deployed in the field, for example in parks, where many branches were strewn on the ground after collapsing under the weight of the ice.

Under a temperature of around 1°C, the ice has melted, but gusts of wind are shaking the trees, with the risk of further falling branches. Authorities are still advising people not to approach power lines.

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