3 tornadoes tear through Quebec, uprooting trees, damaging infrastructure

Three tornadoes ripped through Quebec Wednesday,  uprooting trees and damaging infrastructure, Environment Canada says.The federal weather agency confirmed Thursday the tornadoes touched down in Brossard, near Montreal, St-Hippolyte, Que., located in the Laurentians region, and Cap-Santé, Que., west of the provincial capital.

Pictures shared by the weather agency on X showed the damage the tornado caused in Brossard.Mélanie Mercille, spokesperson for Longueuil, Que., police, says a driver of the semi-trailer that flipped over in Brossard suffered minor injuries, adding that there were no other reports of injuries.

More than 3,500 households lost power on the South Shore late Wednesday, but electricity was almost fully restored by the following morning.Environment Canada says thunderstorms uprooted trees and caused damage in Portneuf, Que., located outside Quebec City, and in the Laurentians region.Heavy rain on Wednesday fell on other regions of Quebec, including Montreal, Lanaudière and Montérégie.

The NTP, out of Western University in London, Ont., published a summary of new data in May stating that Saskatchewan is no longer the province with the highest tornado frequency. The Prairie province had an average of 17.4 tornadoes per year in the 1980-2009 dataset, dropping to 14.6 per year in the 1991-2020 data.Dave Sills, executive director of the NTP, told Global News in June that since the group started in 2017, they’ve found that the strongest tornadoes have been around Barrie, Ont., eastern Ontario and southern Quebec.Historically, some of the biggest tornadoes in Ontario were recorded in May and June, including EF4 tornadoes in Sarnia in May 1953 and Barrie in May 1985 and an EF4 in the Windsor area in June 1946.

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