Montreal drenched in record-breaking rain as tropical storm Debby’s remnants hit Canada

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By Staff The Canadian Press

Posted August 10, 2024 9:14 am

1 min read

 'Post-tropical storm Debby hits Atlantic Canada with heavy rain, flooding'

3:31 Post-tropical storm Debby hits Atlantic Canada with heavy rain, flooding

Residents of Montreal were hammered by heavy rain and flooding as post-tropical storm Debby arrived in Canada. The city received more rain in one day than what's expected for the entire month of August. As Heidi Petracek reports, the storm left a trail of destruction in the U.S. and is now headed for Atlantic Canada. Plus, Global News meteorologist Anthony Farnell is tracking Debby's path, including the massive amount of rain that's falling on Eastern Ontario and Southern Quebec.

Montreal was drenched in a record amount of rain Friday as a storm system continued to pass through Eastern Canada.

Environment Canada figures show Montreal received 157 millimetres of rain on Friday, which broke the previous all-time daily record for rainfall set back in November 1996.

The precipitation was due to the remnants of tropical storm Debby and a low pressure system that had formed over the Great Lakes.

 'Tropical storm Debby brings heavy rain, flooding to Montreal'

1:54 Tropical storm Debby brings heavy rain, flooding to Montreal

Other communities that received a significant amount of rainfall include Gatineau, which reportedly received 70 to 100 millimetres.

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Ottawa received about 76 millimetres as of Friday evening. In Toronto, between 25 and 50 millimetres of rain was expected.

The remnants of the storm is expected to dump 40 to 60 millimetres on New Brunswick through Saturday morning.

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