“Disasters don’t arrive all at once — they slip through every hole we refused to fix.”
- adaptationguide.com
Power outages after first major snowfall of season in Montreal
Winter Isn’t the Problem. Canada’s Denial Is.
Why we are sleepwalking into disaster—and calling it “weather”
We live in a country literally carved out of snow and ice. Our national identity is supposedly built on rugged winters, frozen lakes, parkas, hockey rinks, and stoic endurance. And yet—every single year—we stare open-mouthed at the sky like confused house cats when the snow falls. We act shocked when the power goes out. We treat winter storms like unexpected company instead of permanent tenants.
And our infrastructure? It collapses like it’s got stage fright.
The Illusion of Safety Is Gone
The April 2023 ice storm knocked out power for 1.3 million people across Ontario and Quebec. Entire cities went dark. Trees bent and snapped. Roads evaporated into sheets of glass. Families froze in their homes. Emergency rooms filled. People died.
Not because of chaos.
Not because of “acts of God.”
But because Canada—wealthy, educated, proud, modern Canada—can’t keep the lights on during the season it advertises to tourists.
And if you think that was a fluke, think again.
A mid-winter thaw this past February flooded cities and basements, slamming households with $260 million in insured damages across Ontario, Quebec, and the Atlantic provinces. One month later, another brutal storm plunged 300,000 Ontario homes into darkness, while hundreds of thousands more faced rolling outages from the Maritimes to the Prairies.
What do we call this?
Not “bad luck.”
Try repeated, preventable failure.
Canada Is the Swiss Cheese Model—In Real Time
James Reason taught us the Swiss cheese model of disaster: when weaknesses line up, one threat can bring everything down.
Guess what? Our holes are perfectly aligned:
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Aging wires
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Brittle housing
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Vulnerable trees
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Starved municipal budgets
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Underfunded emergency services
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Outdated grids
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Urban planning designed for a climate that no longer exists
Winter isn’t the assassin.
Our infrastructure is the accomplice.
The 2023 blackout didn’t just inconvenience people. It killed them—by carbon monoxide poisoning, exposure, and medical failure. That wasn’t “weather tragedy.” That was policy homicide.
The Era of Climate Calm Is Dead
Today’s winter is not your grandfather’s winter. It is warmer, wilder, sharper, crueler, faster. Volatility is the new normal, and winter is simply the weapon.
Yet cities like Montreal and Toronto limp along with 50-year-old grid systems. Calgary and Winnipeg saw heating failures across older apartment blocks. Meanwhile we are electrifying cars, buses, homes, and heat pumps—doubling down on demand while our power systems crack under the old load, never mind the new one.
Let’s be honest:
We are not adapting.
We are not preparing.
We are not learning.
We are bracing.
We are patching.
We are hoping.
And hope is not a climate strategy.
The Most Vulnerable Pay the Highest Price
Every storm exposes the same ugly truth: Canada loves to brag about social equity, universal healthcare, and good governance—but winter lays those promises bare.
Who dies first?
Who freezes first?
Who breathes exhaust fumes from a generator?
Seniors.
Low-income families.
People without housing.
Those living in poorly insulated rentals.
This isn’t bad weather.
It’s structural cruelty.
We Don’t Need Luck. We Need Backbone.
In aviation, nuclear energy, and air traffic operations—the industries where failure means death—safety is not optional. They plan for disaster. They expect failure. They train for catastrophe.
And that’s why catastrophe rarely happens.
Meanwhile, Canadian municipalities plan winter response like:
“Maybe this year won’t be so bad.”
What a joke.
What a gamble.
What a betrayal.
We Know EXACTLY What to Do
Here is what a prevention mindset looks like:
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Bury electrical lines.
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Replace poles and wires before storms shred them.
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Retrofit aging apartments.
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Install insulated windows.
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Strengthen heating systems.
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Expand shelters.
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Trim trees aggressively.
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Modernize the grid.
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Train responders to predict—not just react.
None of this is mystery.
None of it is impossible.
None of it is new.
And every dollar spent saves $13 to $15 in future losses.
So why aren’t we doing it?
Because leadership costs political capital.
Because planning is invisible.
Because prevention isn’t sexy.
Here Is the Real Equation
New Normal + Very Extreme = Adapt or Collapse
That’s it. That’s the formula.
You either build for volatility—or you pay the price in blood and cash.
But Canada keeps pretending climate does not apply to us.
Like the laws of physics end at the border.
We Are Running Out of Excuses
Winter storms are not random anymore.
They are not occasional.
They are not surprises.
They are warnings.
They are consequences.
They are unpaid bills coming due.
If this winter felt brutal, it wasn’t because we were unlucky.
It was because we designed a country that assumed tomorrow would behave like yesterday.
It won’t.
It never will again.
Climate change has ended the era of comfort.
It has ended the era of predictability.
It has ended the era of safety.
And we are still treating winter storms like weather, not infrastructure verdicts.
The truth is this:
Winter didn’t fail us.
Climate didn’t fail us.
Government failed us.
Policy failed us.
Planning failed us.
And we are running out of time to pretend otherwise.
