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48 datasets found
  • Open Data

    30-year Average Frost Day Count (-2 °C)

    Frost Day Count (-2 °C) is defined as the count of the number of days in a calendar month where the minimum daily temperature for the climate day was at or below -2 °C. These values are calculated across Canada in 10x10 km cells.
    Organization:
    Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PDF
    • GeoTIF
    • HTML
  • Open Data

    Canadian Seasonal to Inter-annual Prediction System Seasonal Forecasts

    The Canadian Seasonal to Inter-annual Prediction System (CanSIPS) carries out physics calculations to arrive at probabilistic predictions of atmospheric elements from the beginning of a month out to up to 12 months into the future, resulting in seasonal forecasts. Atmospheric elements include...
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • HTML
    • GRIB2
    • WMS
  • Open Data

    Regional Deterministic Precipitation Analysis

    The Regional Deterministic Precipitation Analysis (RDPA) produces a best estimate of the amount of precipitation that occurred over recent past periods of 6 or 24 hours. The estimate integrates data from in situ precipitation gauge measurements, weather radar, satellite imagery and numerical...
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • GRIB2
    • WMS
    • HTML
  • Open Data

    Long Term Climate Extremes, Daily Extremes of Records – Precipitation

    Anomalous weather resulting in Temperature and Precipitation extremes occurs almost every day somewhere in Canada. For the purpose of identifying and tabulating daily extremes of record for temperature, precipitation and snowfall, the Meteorological Service of Canada has threaded or put together...
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • CSV
    • GEOJSON
    • HTML
  • Open Data

    Regional Deterministic Precipitation Analysis of 24 hour amounts

    The Regional Deterministic Precipitation Analysis (RDPA) produces a best estimate of precipitation amounts that occurred over a period of 24 hours. The estimate integrates data from in situ precipitation gauge measurements, weather radar, satellite imagery and numerical weather prediction models....
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • GRIB2
    • HTML
    • WMS
  • Open Data

    Regional Deterministic Precipitation Analysis of 6 hour amounts

    The Regional Deterministic Precipitation Analysis (RDPA) produces a best estimate of precipitation amounts that occurred over a period of 6 hours. The estimate integrates data from in situ precipitation gauge measurements, weather radar, satellite imagery and numerical weather prediction models....
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • GRIB2
    • WMS
    • HTML
  • Open Data

    Minimum Temperature (°C)

    Minimum Temperature represents the lowest recorded temperature value (°C) at each location for a given time period. Time periods include the previous 24 hours and the previous 7 days from the available date where a climate day starts at 0600UTC.
    Organization:
    Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PDF
    • WMS
    • HTML
    • GeoTIF
    • ESRI REST
  • Open Data

    Palmer Hydrological Drought Index

    The term "Palmer Drought Index" has been used collectively to represent multiple indices. This index is simply a water balance model which analyzes precipitation and temperature, and used as a tool to measure meteorological and hydrological drought across space and time. All versions of the...
    Organization:
    Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PDF
    • WMS
    • HTML
    • GeoTIF
    • ESRI REST
  • Open Data

    Crop (corn) heat units

    Crop Heat Units (CHU) are calculated on a daily basis, using the maximum and minimum temperatures in order to account for a crop’s negative response to higher temperatures. The formula used to calculate the CHU value for a day is: (1.8 × (Minimum Temperature − 4.4) + 3.33 × (Maximum...
    Organization:
    Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PDF
    • WMS
    • HTML
    • ESRI REST
    • GeoTIF
  • Open Data

    Dry Spell

    Dry spell periods are defined as the number of days (April 1 – October 31) where daily precipitation is less than 0.5 mm. This is not an accumulation of precipitation, simply a count of days. Dry spell products are only generated during the Growing Season, April 1 through October 31.
    Organization:
    Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PDF
    • WMS
    • HTML
    • ESRI REST
    • GeoTIF
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