Sunday, July 29, 2018

Canadian Climate Comparison: which cities get the most and least rainfall?

In the last post, we compared temperatures in the 41 largest urban areas in Canada (those with 100,000 or more people).  In this post, we'll compare precipitation amounts.

The chart below compares average annual precipitation in the 41 largest cities in Canada, ranked from lowest to highest.  The driest city is Kamloops, in the B.C. Interior, with an average of 287 mm annually.  The remaining top 10 driest urban areas in Canada are mostly in the Prairies, along with two more B.C. cities: Kelowna and Victoria.  People are often surprised that Victoria ranks so high among the driest cities in Canada.  Putting this another way, Victoria gets less annual precipitation than nearly 82% of Canada's urban population.  Victoria's low rainfall is thanks to rainshadowing, from both the mountains on Vancouver Island and from the Olympic Mountains in Washington State.  The wettest of the 41 cities is Chilliwack, followed by Vancouver and Abbotsford.  St. John's and Halifax round out the top 5 wettest cities in Canada.  It's striking that cities in Coastal B.C. occupy the top 3 spots for the wettest urban areas in Canada, while nearby Victoria ranks as the 10th driest out of the 41 cities.

Average Annual Precipitation for Urban Areas in Canada

Seasonal variations in precipitation are also important when comparing Canadian cities.  The chart below ranks summer (June to August) precipitation for Canada's cities.  With just 52 mm of rainfall, Victoria is by far the driest urban area in Canada during the summer.  The next driest city - Kamloops - gets nearly 70% more summer rainfall than Victoria, most cities outside of B.C. - such as Calgary, Toronto, or Montreal - get 4 to 5 times as much summer rainfall as Victoria.  The top 6 driest summer cities are all in B.C. - 4 on the coast and 2 in the Interior.  This really shows the impact of the seasonal variation of precipitation in Coastal B.C.  While we just saw that Vancouver ranks as the second wettest city in terms of total annual precipitation, it is the 5th driest city in Canada in terms of summer precipitation.  The wettest summers tend to be in Atlantic Canada and Quebec.

Average Summer Precipitation for Urban Areas in Canada

Victoria also has relatively dry springs - ranking as the 9th driest among Canadian cities.  Fall precipitation in Victoria is closer to the average, with the city ranking as the 17th driest out of 41 cities.  Winter is a different story.  The chart below ranks winter (December to February) precipitation for Canadian cities.  Saskatoon has the driest winters among Canadian cities, with just 37 mm of precipitation.  The top 10 driest winter cities are all located in the Prairies, the B.C. Interior, or Northwestern Ontario.  Victoria ranks as the 31st driest winter city (or the 11th wettest), with 264 mm of precipitation.  The top 5 wettest winter cities are exactly the same as the top 5 wettest cities overall, with Chilliwack in first place with a whopping 659 mm.

Average Winter Precipitation for Urban Areas in Canada

3 comments:

  1. Missing places which means is an inaccurate list and a pile of bullshit you can just pick and choose the towns you want to use for a study in a place you got to use all of their towns and cities if you're going to study a place

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You can only legibly choose to include so many cities in the chart, so I chose the 41 largest urban areas in Canada. Even if you used every Environment Canada weather station in the country, the patterns would be the same.

      Delete
  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete