LATEST NEWS
Heavy Equipment | Engineering | Building Envelope | Roadbuilding
January 9, 2012
Warmer winter means a lack of ice roads in Manitoba

WINNIPEG
One of Manitoba's top aboriginal leaders says climate change is threatening crucial ice roads, driving up prices in northern native communities and underlining the need for the federal government to build more permanent highways.
Grand Chief David Harper, who represents the province’s northern First Nations, said unseasonably warm weather this winter has meant ice roads aren’t even close to being constructed.
That means another year in which supplies such as groceries, fuel and construction materials are scarce and expensive in remote communities.
Aboriginal elders have predicted a warmer winter this year with a late cold snap that is likely to come too late to be of much use, Harper said.
“We’ve got to prepare for the worst. It’s going to be a small window of opportunity,” he said.
The chance to build and use ice roads – which help connect about two dozen fly-in aboriginal communities to the south – has been shrinking.
Aboriginals and environmentalists have said that Manitoba’s winter season is growing shorter.
Ice roads across frozen ground, lakes and rivers that have typically been open for 60 days are now sometimes only usable for about 20.
The winter transportation system is vital.
The province estimates some 2,500 shipments of staple items are transported each year by truck over 2,200 kilometres of icy road instead of being flown in at great expense.
In 2010, some aboriginal chiefs declared a state of emergency as warm weather turned their winter roads into mucky quagmires, stranding some truckers and causing fuel shortages.
It’s clear dozens of northern communities can’t rely on ice roads any more and the federal government must help construct more permanent routes, Harper said.
He and other aboriginal leaders intend to raise the issue with Prime Minister Stephen Harper at a First Nations summit later this month.
“All-weather roads into the northern region have to be taken quite seriously from now on,’’ he said.
“Saskatchewan did it. Quebec did it. We’ve got to speed up the process.’’
Aboriginal communities have been raising the alarm about melting winter roads for several years.
The shortened winter hauling season also exacerbates housing shortages in northern communities since many construction materials can only be transported overland, the study said.
Provincial officials are more optimistic about the coming winter.
Larry Halayko, director of contract services for Manitoba Infrastructure, said crews are already packing down snow so frost can penetrate the ground, although he admits warm weather has put them about two weeks behind schedule.
If the province gets more seasonable temperatures, some roads may open by the end of the month, he said.
They may be subject to load restrictions, though, and may close early depending on the weather.
“There are always concerns if we have warmer weather,’’ he said.
“But we’ve had warmer falls in the past and ended up having a very good season in the end.’’
News from © Canadian Press Enterprises Inc., 2012
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 541 projects with a total value of $2,992,674,310 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Thursday.
$610,000,000 Vancouver BC Prebid
MINE PROCESSING FACILITIES & RELATED
$470,000,000 Iskut 6 BC Prebid
$60,000,000 Vancouver BC Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Construction Site Arson
- VIDEO: Journal of Commerce Update for the week of May 27th, 2013
- Historic church renovation reaches new heights
- Hiring of foreign workers for hospital project outrages union
- Acetylene torch explosion causes significant damage
- Festival of Architecture hits Halifax
- Winnipeg Southwest Transitway wins award
- Vendor performance is key measurement
- NDP leader spoke to police about corruption
- Big contract down under for ATCO Structures
- RFQ issued for Kamloops hospital project
- VIDEO: Economic Update May 21, 2013
- Prompt payment bill headed to committee
- Final Phase
- A return to core values a must for banks: Carney
- OHMPA on the road with informative seminars
- Local 675 strike ends after new agreement ratified
- NDP says it will support Liberal budget, averting spring election
- Measure of U.S. economy’s future health rises 0.6 per cent in April after March dip
- Terratec awarded Brighton, Ont. Lagoon Clean-Out Project contract
- Fundraising campaign to reach target for new Shriners Hospital for Children
- George Brown College building named after Tridel CEO
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- An Overview of Prices and Sales in the Diverging U.S. and Canadian Housing Markets (April 25, 2013)
- Canada’s Precarious Dependence on the Commodity Price Super-Cycle (April 22, 2013)
- Twenty major upcoming residential and transportation terminal construction projects - April 2013 (April 15, 2013)
- More









