Environment Canada to roll out AI-assisted weather model this spring to sharpen forecasts

Environment and Climate Change Canada plans to launch an artificial intelligence–assisted weather forecasting system this spring, saying the hybrid approach will make predictions more accurate and faster for major systems such as winter storms, heat waves and atmospheric rivers.
The department said Thursday the new model blends AI with its traditional physics-based methods. Officials said AI will be used to detect patterns in decades of historical, continent-scale data within minutes, while the physics-based model preserves local details—such as wind, temperature and precipitation—that AI models can miss.
The combination, the department said, is particularly effective for anticipating extreme events like strong winds and heat waves and for tracking hurricanes. With the new setup, the department said its six-day forecast is expected to be as accurate as its current five-day outlook.
It called that projection significant, noting that similar gains previously required years of research and development. Environment and Climate Change Canada said scientists and meteorologists have spent the past year running the hybrid system in parallel with its traditional model to assess its performance for Canadian conditions.
The department emphasized that meteorologists’ judgment remains critical for interpreting results and communicating them to the public. Some forecasters welcome the speed boost while urging caution about how the AI side uses past data in a rapidly changing climate.
“The fact that that much climate data can be analyzed so quickly and incorporated into a product that we can use is exciting,” said Halifax-based meteorologist Cindy Day, who has worked in the field for more than 40 years. But she questioned how useful large historical datasets will be as conditions evolve.
“The rate at which our temperatures are changing and our climate is changing is significant. And so I’m not sure that the analysis of so much data going back so much time so very quickly is going to make a big difference into producing a forecast for the next five, six, seven days,” she said.
The department said the hybrid model will be used to speed the detection of major weather systems and improve lead times for warnings. It expects the system to enhance the accuracy of forecasts delivered to the public and emergency managers once it goes into operation this spring.
