Monster storm in North Atlantic stretches cloud from Atlantic Canada to Portugal
An intense and huge low-pressure system is centred about 750 kilometres to the northeast of St. John’s, Newfoundland.
Clouds created by the storm and associated weather fronts stretch from Newfoundland towards Atlantic coastal Portugal, Spain, and France.
The centre of the low and associated weather front along with satellite imagery.
The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration of the U.S. has the central pressure of the system analysed as near 940 millibars. A millibar, abbreviated as mb, is a unit used to measure atmospheric pressure. For context, low, or storm weather systems, usually begin below 1,010 millibars. The strongest winter Nor’easters in the Maritimes can fall below 970 mb. White Juan, which was a winter storm that hit the Maritimes in 2004, was recorded as falling to 959 mb. The standing low temperature record for a low-pressure system in Canada is post-tropical storm Fiona, which was estimated to have reached 932.7 mb upon landfall.
The pressure gradient created between the North Atlantic low and high pressure centred over Quebec is driving hurricane-force winds near the centre of the storm. Hurricane forecast winds have also been detected by satellite imagery in the Atlantic waters just to the south of Greenland. Wind barbs that show two full triangles are 100 knots, or 185 km/h.
Satellite analyzed winds around the storm from the NOAA.
There are only tertiary weather impacts from the storm in the Maritimes. It is helping to keep a colder and gusty west wind blowing over the Gulf of St. Lawrence and into Cape Breton. The colder wind is picking up moisture from the gulf and bringing it onshore in the form of flurries and snow squalls, mostly for the Cape Breton Highlands.
Some of the cloud seen here in a webcam from Atlantic coastal Spain and above the skyline of St. John’s associated with the powerful weather system.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING Suspect shot after multiple people stabbed in downtown Vancouver: police
A 'number of people' were stabbed in downtown Vancouver Wednesday before a suspect was shot by police, authorities say.
DEVELOPING As police search for suspect, disturbing video surfaces after U.S. health-care CEO gunned down in New York
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was killed Wednesday morning in what investigators suspect was a targeted shooting outside a Manhattan hotel where the health insurer was holding an investor conference.
'Utterly absurd': Freeland rebuffs Poilievre's offer of two hours to present fall economic statement
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has rebuffed Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's offer to give up two hours of scheduled opposition time next Monday to present the awaited fall economic statement as 'utterly absurd.'
Minister 'extremely concerned' after Air Canada announces change to carry-on bags
Air Canada plans to bar carry-on bags and impose a seat selection fee for its lowest-fare customers in the new year.
Canadian appears in U.S. court in decades-old cold case
Robert Creter made his first court appearance since his extradition to the United States from Winnipeg. He's the prime suspect in the murder of 23-year-old Tami Tignor – a cold case dating back to 1997.
French government toppled in historic no-confidence vote
French opposition lawmakers brought the government down on Wednesday, throwing the European Union's second-biggest economic power deeper into a political crisis that threatens its capacity to legislate and rein in a massive budget deficit.
Why are some Canada Post outlets still open during CUPW strike?
As many postal workers continue to strike across the country, some Canadians have been puzzled by the fact some Canada Post offices and retail outlets remain open.
Woman who stowed away on plane to Paris placed on flight back to U.S.
A Russian woman who stowed away on a Delta Air Lines flight from New York to Paris last week is on her way back to the United States.
Warm, wet winter expected in much of Canada, say forecasters
Federal forecasters expect a warmer-than-normal start to winter in most of Canada, with more precipitation than usual in parts of the country.