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Toronto must adapt better to changing climate after 2nd major flooding event in 11 years, experts warn

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Toronto

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After 11 years almost to the day, Toronto has experienced its second major flooding event, knocking out power, flooding city streets and transit stations. It’s a reminder that cities need to better adapt to a changing climate.

Tuesday’s extreme rain is very reminiscent of 2013 flood with similar consequences

Nicole Mortillaro · CBC News

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Can Toronto infrastructure handle another major downpour? | Canada Tonight

Almost exactly 11 years ago on July 8, 2013, Toronto saw more than a month’s worth of rainfall in just hours — a similar stat as Tuesday’s event. David Kellershohn, the associate director of engineering services at the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority, talks about infrastructure and emergency management changes since 2013.

In 2013, Toronto was hit with a massive storm. In just 90 minutes, the city received 126 millimetres of rain.

Roads flooded, with drivers abandoning their cars, and stairs leading to subway stations became urban waterfalls. The Don Valley Parkway (DVP), the main north-south thoroughfare into the city, was closed as the adjacent Don River overran its banks, spilling onto the roadway. A GO Transit commuter train was stranded with 1,400 passengers on board. Nearly 300,000 residents were left without power.

And on Tuesday — 11 years and eight days after that historic flood — it’s déjà vu for the largest, most populous city in Canada. 

This time, the rain started in the morning around 9 a.m., catching many commuters off guard. It eased up for a bit until another, much more potent storm system moved in less than an hour later, lasting until the afternoon. Shortly after, power outages began to pop up across the city.

Once again, images and videos inundated social media: Toronto’s Union Station was flooded, as was the DVP and city streets; GO Transit halted service temporarily; cars were abandoned. 

A GO Train is stranded in flood water during a massive rain storm that hit Toronto in July 2013.

A GO Train is stranded in flood water during a massive rain storm that hit Toronto in July 2013. (Winston Neutel/Canadian Press)

Following the 2013 flood, talk abounded about how Toronto needed to better adapt, as climate change was likely to make these heavy rain events more frequent and more severe. And while it’s too early to attribute Tuesday’s rainfall to climate change, by all appearances, the city still seems unprepared for a major rainfall event.

As greenhouse gases continue to be pumped into our atmosphere, the effects of climate change will continue to be felt across Canada and the world.

“Climate change is not going anywhere.… These events are going to continue to increase in frequency and severity,” said Kathryn Bakos, managing director of finance and resilience at the University of Waterloo’s Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation.

“As temperatures continue to rise, you’re going to have more moisture in the system. So with more moisture and energy, you’re going to have bigger storms, larger precipitation events, with more water coming down over shorter periods of time,” she said, “so storms are going to come down with even greater force.

“And that’s exactly what we’re seeing all across the GTA and across Canada, as well.”

WATCH |Toronto’s Union Station floods due to heavy rain:

Toronto’s Union Station flooding due to heavy rain

Union Station’s Bay Concourse Hall is dealing with flooding as a result of Tuesday’s torrential rainfall.

But it’s not just about climate change that’s exacerbating these events, she said. 

“Climate change isn’t the only driver in the system. You’re seeing aging municipal infrastructure, infrastructure that never incorporated adaptation,” she said. “It’s also not taking the increase the influx of people. We have more people utilizing the infrastructure.”

Need for more natural habitat

It’s also the concrete jungle effect, she noted.

Over time, Toronto has removed natural infrastructure like wetlands, grasslands and forested areas, which act like natural sponges. Instead, concrete roadways, driveways and buildings stand in their place. 

“The infrastructure that we have is designed really for the historical conditions, and these events have a very different nature,” Slobodan Simonovic, professor emeritus at Western University’s department of civil and environmental engineering told CBC News.

He said that pressure on governments and forethought into budgeting for these events is needed for the future.

WATCH | Is Toronto’s infrastructure built to withstand intense rain? This expert says no:

Is Toronto’s infrastructure built to withstand intense rain? This expert says no

Slobodan Simonovic, professor emeritus of civil and environmental engineering at Western University, says many cities in Canada are woefully behind when it comes to infrastructure that can withstand flash floods.

“Climate change is real,” said Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow on Tuesday during a press scrum. “We are expecting almost a doubling of the number of severe rain storm days in 15 years. So we have to redouble our efforts to have mitigating actions, because we have to do more prevention work.”

Chow also noted that the city has provided more incentives to homeowners to prevent flooding in homes. 

She said the city has freed up $2 billion after the province uploaded the cost of the DVP and the Gardiner Expressway, which is being put toward Toronto’s aging transit system and roads. However, she noted the city is still $26 billion and more than 10 years behind in infrastructure work.

Bakos said the city has made some improvements.

“I think they’ve really recognized that they have a very big issue. Infrastructure improvements are being made, and I think they recognize that more needs to be done, as well.”

Yet it may be frustrating for commuters and residents who see the same areas flooded time and again, such as the DVP and Lake Shore Boulevard.

Lake Shore now overflowing into Lake Ontario – stranded cars farther up the road.#ONstorm pic.twitter.com/nl4X0wuAA5

@vaughanweather

WATCH | Toronto directing funds to infrastructure, but still billions behind:

Toronto directing funds to infrastructure, but still billions behind

Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow says that because the city was able to upload maintenance of the Don Valley Parkway and the Gardiner Expressway to the province, it can now add $2 billion of funding toward the TTC, roadways, hydro, sewage management and other infrastructure projects. However, Chow says the city is still $26 billion and over 10 years behind in infrastructure work.

Adaptation is the key, Bakos said.

“Every dollar that you put into place for adaptation, on average, saves $3 to $8 in cost avoidance over a 10-year period. So it’s a more cost-effective strategy to become resilient and adapt to these extreme weather events now, rather than waiting in the future.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Based in Toronto, Nicole covers all things science for CBC News. As an amateur astronomer, Nicole can be found looking up at the night sky appreciating the marvels of our universe. She is the editor of the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and the author of several books. In 2021, she won the Kavli Science Journalism Award from the American Association for the Advancement of Science for a Quirks and Quarks audio special on the history and future of Black people in science. You can send her story ideas at nicole.mortillaro@cbc.ca.

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