Weatheradio Canada

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Weatheradio Canada
Frequency162.400162.550 MHz
Programming
FormatWeather radio
Ownership
OwnerEnvironment and Climate Change Canada
OperatorMeteorological Service of Canada
History
First air date
1976 (1976)
Last air date
March 16, 2026 (2026-03-16)
Links
WebsiteWeatheradio Canada
Weatheradio Canada English broadcast cycle in Edmonton; station XLM572.

Weatheradio Canada (French: Radiométéo Canada) was an automated 24-hour network of VHF FM weather radio stations based in Canada. Owned and operated by Environment and Climate Change Canada's Meteorological Service of Canada division, it was one of the two weather radio systems across North America alongside NOAA Weather Radio in the United States. Weatheradio Canada was headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, and was broadcast in both official languages (English and French) from 230 sites across the country. Weatheradio Canada, as well as Environment Canada's weather telephone service Hello Weather, used Nuance Communications text-to-speech voices. Starcaster Text-To-Speech, owned by STR-SpeechTech Ltd, was used from 1994 to 2022.[1]

In February 2026, Environment Canada announced the decommissioning of the service effective on March 16th of that year.[2] All transmitters were shut down during the early morning hours of March 31, 2026.

Weatheradio Canada French broadcast cycle in Edmonton; station XLM572.

History

Weather radios
Example of two Midland weather radio receivers

In 1976, Environment Canada's Weatheradio service was launched and expanded to 30 locations in roughly 10 years. In the early-1990s, increased government investment permitted major expansion of the network to its largest size of 230 sites.

In most locations, the service broadcast on one of seven specially-allocated VHF radio frequencies, audible only on dedicated "weather band" receivers or any VHF radio capable of receiving 10 kHz bandwidth FM signals centred on these assigned channels, which were located within the larger "public service band". The radio frequencies used by Weatheradio Canada were the same as those used by its American counterpart, NOAA Weather Radio (whose parent agency, the U.S. National Weather Service, is also a partner with the Meteorological Service of Canada) . From 2004 to its decommissioning, the service used Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME) alerting technology to disseminate severe weather alerts. In the late 2010s, Environment Canada indicated that it would, in the future, add other hazard and civil emergency information (such as natural disasters, technological accidents, Amber alerts and terrorist attacks) to Weatheradio broadcasts.[3] Such enhancements never came to fruition.

In some locations, primarily national parks, provincial parks and remote communities with little or no local media service, a transmitter operated by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation carried the service on a standard AM or FM broadcast frequency. As of August 2007, most of these AM and FM transmitters were unlicensed by the CRTC under a special licence exemption granted to low-power non-commercial broadcasters.[4]

In September 2020, Environment and Climate Change Canada began soliciting feedback on possible decommissioning of 48 of its 230 transmitters. ECCC stated that the transmitters were predominantly located in areas of overlapping coverage and where alternate methods of access (such as cell phones and the Internet) were available.[5]

On May 26, 2021, through Required Weekly Tests sent over the network, ECCC announced Weatheradio Canada's transition into its new voice technology system, after 27 years using the Starcaster voices.[6] The new voice used for the system was Nuance Tom from Nuance Communications, a newer version of the old NOAA Weather Radio voice used prior to 2016. This transition began on June 1st of that year, and while supposed to end on New Year's Eve of 2021,[7] some stations held out into summer 2022 before making the switch.[8]

On August 19, 2022, an announcement was sent on 8 transmitters in the network regarding the impending decommission of said transmitters within the next 6 months. The 8 transmitters announced for decommissioning were: Cooking Lake, AB; Saskatoon, SK; Orillia, ON; Brockville, ON; Fredericton, NB; Perth-Andover, NB; Aspen-Melrose, NS and Grand Falls, NL.[5] Of these, Saskatoon and Orillia were spared while the remainder were discontinued.

The Administrative Message (SAME) of the shutdown announcement. Broadcast on the Weatheradio Canada transmitter in Saskatoon; station XLF322.

On February 23, 2026, ECCC announced that as part of the federal government's Comprehensive Expenditure Review, Weatheradio Canada and Hello Weather would be decommissioned nationwide effective three weeks later on March 16th.[9][10] The agency cited rising maintenance costs as the main factor.[11] Continuous marine broadcasts, operated by the Canadian Coast Guard for maritime interests, remained in service. On March 16, Weatheradio Canada broadcast a repeated announcement informing listeners that the service has been permanently shut down.[11]

As of March 31, 2026, all weather radio stations across the country were shut down. No advice was given as to what to do for those in rural or wilderness areas without cellular service or satellite devices.

Frequencies

A black, rack-mounted Motorola Quantar radio transmitter unit showing its front ventilation grill and connection ports.
A Motorola Quantar VHF repeater formerly used at a Weatheradio Canada site on 162.400 MHz. Multiple models of these base station repeater units have been used across the Weatheradio Canada network.

Weatheradio Canada signals were transmitted using FM (10 kHz bandwidth), with band spacing of 25 kHz. These transmissions covered areas in around a 80-kilometre (50-mile) radius from the station, but this all depended on terrain, weather quality, and the antenna height above ground. It was estimated that over 90 percent of Canadians lived within range of a Weatheradio transmitter.[5] The service used multiple frequencies:[12]

  • 162.400 MHz
  • 162.425 MHz
  • 162.450 MHz
  • 162.475 MHz
  • 162.500 MHz
  • 162.525 MHz
  • 162.550 MHz

At selected locations, low power broadcasts without the alert tone were transmitted on the regular FM or AM band. A Weatheradio receiver was not required to hear these broadcasts.[13]

Programming

An AM Weatheradio Canada station antenna

Weather information was broadcast in both official languages (English, then French). Prior to June 2021, broadcasts in Quebec were in the opposite order. The language order became uniform after new systems were installed. Weather alert broadcasts were inserted within the normal playlist. Wind and wave marine forecasts are broadcast on a regular basis on transmitters located near marine zones. However, these and other forms of marine forecasts were more conveniently heard on the Canadian Coast Guard's continuous marine broadcasts, which (except for British Columbia) are not broadcast on weather-band frequencies. Weather broadcasts also included the UV index for the forecast day, and for the following day. The Air Quality Health Index forecast was broadcast at the end of the broadcast cycle for cities in the station's service area.

Alerting

Whenever a weather or civil emergency alert was issued for any part of a Weatheradio Canada station's coverage area, many radios with an alert feature sounded an alarm or turned on upon detection of a 1,050 Hz attention tone that sounds just before the voice portion of an alert message.[14] The specification calls for the Weatheradio Canada transmitter to sound the alert tone for ten seconds and for the receiver to react to it within five seconds. This system simply triggered the alarm or turned on the radio of every muted receiver within reception range of that station (in other words, any receiver located anywhere within the transmitter's broadcast area). Generally, receivers with this functionality are either older or basic models.

Many newer or more sophisticated alerting receivers can detect, decode and react to a digital signal called Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME), which allows users to program their radios to receive alerts only for specific geographical areas of interest and concern, rather than for an entire broadcast area. These advanced models may also have colored LED status lights which indicate the level of the alert as an "advisory", "watch" or "warning" (either amber or green for advisories, orange or yellow for watches and red for warnings).

When an alert was transmitted, the SAME header/data signal was broadcast first (heard as three repeated audio "bursts"), followed by the 1,050 Hz attention tone, then the voice message, then the end-of-message (EOM) data signal (repeated quickly three times). This encoding/decoding technology had the advantage of avoiding "false alarms" triggered by the 1,050 Hz tone itself in locations outside the intended warning area.[15]

Test Procedures

All Weatheradio Canada transmitters automatically conducted either a Required Weekly Test (RWT), or along with a Required Monthly Test (RMT).[16] The test message was typically aired soon after 12:00 PM local time. Unlike RWTs, the RMT messages are accompanied by the 1,050 Hz attention tone after the initial SAME headers.

The test script is read by the female TTS voice as follows:

"Environment Canada has a message to broadcast: This is a required weekly test for [call sign]. I repeat, this is a required weekly test for [call sign]." "Environnement Canada a un message à diffuser: Ceci est un test hebdomadaire obligatoire pour [call sign]. Je répète, ceci est un test hebdomadaire obligatoire pour [call sign]"

Former stations

Complete list of Weatheradio Canada's defunct transmitters. [17] [18] [19]


Alberta

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Calgary162.400XLF-339
Cold Lake162.525VFZ-535
Cooking Lake162.475XOF-962
Drumheller162.550VBX-367
Edmonton162.400XLM-572
Edson162.400VBU-827
Fort Chipewyan162.550VFR-368
Fort McMurray162.400CFA-340
Grande Prairie162.400VBA-557
Highvale162.475VBU-829
Holden162.550CFB-635
Limestone Mountain162.400VDA-280
Long Lake162.550VFS-310
Flagstaff162.400CFB-636
Medicine Hat162.550VBK-616
Milk River162.400XKA-598
Peace River162.475VBU-374
Red Deer162.550VBC-336
St. Paul162.400CIM-235
Two Hills162.525VXF-723
Whitecourt162.550VBU-828

British Columbia

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Castlegar162.550XMD-482
Chilliwack162.400VFV-785
Cranbrook162.400VBI-853
Crawford Bay162.425VFD-904
Fort Nelson162.550VXB-567
Fort St. John162.475VXL-336
Kamloops162.400 & 101.9 FMCIT-768 & CBPL-FM
Kelowna162.550XMD-480
Masset162.425CKK-900
Penticton162.475XMD-481
Port Alberni162.525XLA-823
Port Hardy162.525VBH-444
Prince George162.400VGB-723
Prince Rupert162.525VXB-571
Revelstoke162.400 & 1580 AMCIT-386 & CBPK
Sandspit162.500XLK-894
Sicamous162.400CIQ-882
Texada Island162.525CGX-451
Ucluelet162.525CIZ-319
Vancouver162.550CGZ-555
Vernon162.475VFM-608
Victoria162.400XLA-726

Saskatchewan

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Broadview162.475VCB-462
Elbow162.475VBP-687
Estevan162.400VAM-595
Fort Qu'Appelle162.400CHZ-715
Lanigan162.400VBU-746
Prince Albert162.400VAR-551
Regina162.550XLM-537
Regina Beach162.400VBC-936
Saskatoon162.550XLF-322
Stranraer162.400VAR-554
Waseca162.400VDI-204

Manitoba

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Altona162.425VFN-684
Brandon162.550VAO-302
Dauphin162.550VBA-814
Falcon Lake162.425VXE-212
Gull Lake162.525CGN-875
Portage La Prairie162.400CKE-695
Long Point162.550VCI-386
Pointe du Bois162.450VXG-567
Reston162.425VXK-206
Riverton162.400XLF-471
Steinbach162.475VFN-683
Thompson162.400VXI-858
Winkler162.550VXM-345
Winnipeg162.550XLM-538
Woodridge162.400CGN-886

Ontario

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Algonquin Park162.400 & 100.1 FMVEF-956 & CJNK-FM
Algonquin Park East101.3 FMCJNK-FM-1
Algonquin Park West101.3 FMCJNK-FM-2
Atikokan162.400VFI-331
Barry’s Bay162.525VFK-722
Beardmore162.475XLJ-892
Belleville162.425VFK-720
Brockville162.425VFK-721
Bruce Peninsula Park90.7 FMCBPS-FM
Collingwood162.475XMJ-316
Fort Frances162.400VDB-224
Goderich162.400XLT-839
Greater Sudbury162.400XLJ-898
Kawartha Lakes162.400VAW-217
Kenora162.475XLJ-890
Kingston162.400XJV-363
Kitchener162.550XMJ-330
Lavant162.450VBE-716
Little Current162.475XMJ-375
London162.475XLN-470
Marathon162.550VAT-341
Moose Creek162.450VBE-718
Mount Forest162.450XLN-600
Nipigon162.550XLJ-891
Normandale162.450VFI-621
North Bay162.475XLJ-893
Orillia162.400VBV-562
Ottawa-Gatineau162.550CZN-626
Parry Sound88.9 FM [20]CBPO-FM
Paisley162.425XMJ-320
Pembroke162.475VAV-559
Peterborough162.550VEU-671
Ramore162.400VDB-885
Renfrew162.425VEA-549
Rosseau162.550VBT-629
Sarnia-Oil Springs162.400XJV-492
Sault Ste. Marie162.400XMJ-373
Temagami162.400CFE-261
Thunder Bay162.475XMJ-374
Timmins162.475VDB-886
Toronto162.400XMJ-225
Wawa162.475VAT-404
Windsor162.475VAZ-533

Quebec

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Amqui162.400XLR-528
Baie-Trinité162.475VDD-596
Beauce162.525XLR-527
Blanc-Sablon162.400XLR-526
Carleton-sur-Mer162.500VDD-598
Charlevoix162.475XLR-611
Chibougamau162.550XLR-749
Dégelis162.550VDD-225
Gaspé162.550VDD-597
Gatineau-Ottawa162.550CZN-626
Harrington Harbour162.550XLR-606
Îles-de-la-Madeleine162.550VOR-668
Kegaska162.475XLR-529
La Malbaie162.400 
La Tuque162.475VBB-499
Lac-Mégantic162.550XLR-420
Matane162.475VDD-596
Mingan162.400VOR-669
Mont-Laurier162.550XLR-969
Montmagny162.400VDD-464
Montréal162.550XLM-300
Mont-Tremblant162.475VAF-367
Québec162.550XLM-369
Rimouski162.550XLR-617
Rivière-au-Renard162.475XLR-525
Rouyn-Noranda162.400XLR-748
Saguenay162.550XLR-285
Sainte-Anne-Des-Monts/Sept-Îles162.550XLR-519
Saint-Félicien162.475VBS-906
Sherbrooke162.475XLR-412
Trois-Rivières162.400XLR-411
Val-d'Or162.475XLR-747
Ville-Marie162.550XLR-750

New Brunswick

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Dalhousie162.550XLK-418
Edmundston162.400VFH-528
Fredericton162.475VCF-757
Millville162.550XLM-404
Miscou Island162.550CGZ-724
Moncton162.550XLM-467
Perth-Andover162.500VFH-526
Saint-Isidore162.400XLK-417
St. Stephen162.475XLM-490
Sussex162.400XLM-403

Prince Edward Island

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Charlottetown162.400XLM-647
O'Leary162.475XLK-645
Souris162.525XLK-644

Nova Scotia

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Aspen162.400XLK-499
Bridgewater162.400XLK-409
Chéticamp162.475XLW-263
Dingwall162.550XLM-667
East Bay162.475XLW-262
Halifax162.550XLK-473
Kingsville162.550 
Middleton162.550XLK-497
New Tusket162.550XLK-496
Shelburne162.550XLK-410
Sydney162.400XLK-444
Truro162.500XLK-498
Yarmouth162.475XLW-573

Newfoundland and Labrador

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Birchy Lake162.400XLM-665
Brent's Cove162.400XLW-297
Carmanville162.475CKL-805
Conche162.550XLW-296
Corner Brook162.550XLW-200
Gander162.400XLM-616
Goose Bay162.400CZQ-768
Grand Falls162.550XLM-664
Hermitage162.550XLW-204
Labrador City162.550CZT-650
Mary's Harbour162.475CFD-876
Marystown162.400XLM-663
Plum Point162.550XLW-295
Port Rexton162.550XLM-615
Portland Creek162.400XLW-298
Red Rocks162.550XLW-202
St. Anthony162.400XLW-299
St. John's162.400XLM-614
Stephenville162.400XLW-201
Trepassey162.550XLM-662

Yukon

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Dawson City162.550CKP-965
Mayo162.400CKP-964
Tagish162.550VFS-369
Whitehorse162.400CIY-270

Northwest Territories

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Behchoko162.475CHR-950
Fort McPherson162.450CHR-956 
Fort Providence162.425CHR-951
Fort Simpson162.400CHR-952
Fort Smith162.425CFM-468
Hay River162.550CIE-211
Inner Whaleback Rocks162.550XKI-403
Inuvik162.400VBU-996
Nahanni Butte162.525CHR-957
Tuktoyaktuk162.475CHR-955
Yellowknife162.400VBC-200

Nunavut

City of LicenceFrequency (MHz)Call sign
Arviat162.400CKO-583
Cape Dorset162.550XJS-717 
Iqaluit162.550 & 93.3 FM [21]VEV-284 & CIQA-FM
Rankin Inlet162.400XJS-716

See also

References

  1. "Starcaster Text to Speech".
  2. Press, The Canadian (2026-03-14). "Weatheradio going off the air as Environment Canada moves emphasis to online and apps". CTVNews. Retrieved 2026-05-25.
  3. Canada, Environment and Climate Change. "Event codes for the Specific Area Message Encoding - Canada.ca". www.canada.ca. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  4. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2007-280, August 7, 2007.
  5. Environment and Climate Change Canada (2010-01-28). "Weatheradio: find your network". Canada.ca. Section titled "Weatheradio Canada Status Update – September 3rd, 2020". Retrieved 2021-01-26.
  6. Bukoski, Brian (2000-01-12). "Applications of Environment Canada's Text-to-Voice System". ams.confex.com. Retrieved 2021-06-06.
  7. @ECCCWeatherNB (2021-06-01). "Today the #ATL & #QC regions will be greeted by a new voice on their Weatheradio and automated telephone weather service. Different voice - same service" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  8. Environment & Climate Change Canada Weatheradio Canada - Winnipeg Transition to iNotify from AVIPADS, retrieved 2023-07-11
  9. "Weatherradio disconnected for good". Swift Current Online. 2026-02-23. Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  10. "[ATTENTION] Arret de production des fichiers citypage_weather mp3 // Production of citypage_weather mp3 files discontinued - dd_info - Comm.Collab.Science.Gc.Ca". comm.collab.science.gc.ca. Retrieved 2026-04-23.
  11. Press, The Canadian (2026-03-14). "Weatheradio going off the air as Environment Canada moves emphasis to online and apps". CTVNews. Retrieved 2026-03-16.
  12. Canada, Environment and Climate Change. "Weatheradio Canada: general information - Canada.ca". www.ec.gc.ca. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  13. Canada, Environment and Climate Change (2010-01-28). "Weatheradio: find your network". www.canada.ca. Retrieved 2025-02-12.
  14. Canada, Environment and Climate Change (2010-03-10). "Event codes for the Specific Area Message Encoding". www.canada.ca. Retrieved 2025-02-12.
  15. Canada, Environment and Climate Change (2010-03-10). "Event codes for the Specific Area Message Encoding". www.canada.ca. Retrieved 2025-02-12.
  16. Ryan (2019-09-03). "NOAA Weather Radio: Required Weekly Test Guide". MIDLAND. Retrieved 2025-02-12.
  17. Environment Canada Station List
  18. Canadian Weather Radio Broadcasts - dxinfocentre.com
  19. Weatheradio Canada Station List - qsl.net
  20. Decision CRTC 95-708
  21. Decision CRTC 98-478