Climate change threatens winter roads connecting northwestern Ontario

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Attendees gather in Thunder Bay for the Nishnawbe Aski Nation Northern Roads Summit.

For many northern Ontario First Nations, apart from air travel, the only connection to the rest of the province is seasonal winter roads built each year on the frozen rivers, lakes, muskeg and earth. As climate change continues to narrow the window during which winter roads are useable, Nishnawbe Aski Nation gathered in Thunder Bay to strategize how to keep its communities connected in a rapidly thawing north.

As warmer temperatures put the long-term viability of the winter road network at risk, some said it's time to start looking at more permanent infrastructure. Neskantaga has been asking the government to help them get a bridge across that segment, said Moonias. Merrina Zhang, a senior engineer at the National Research Council, spoke about climate change data at the Northern Roads Summit.

"This is a mode of transportation that needs persistent cold and needs predictable cold," Zhang said. "Weather's becoming more unpredictable. It's warming up earlier and freezing a little later."

 

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