Climate Changed: Canadian arenas adapting and improving to combat temperature changes
It’s getting harder to make ice in Winnipeg, a city known for its frigid winters.
Warmer summers and sudden shifts in temperature in the spring and fall have made it difficult for the older refrigeration systems in Winnipeg’s municipal arenas to get the cement slab sufficiently cold. Todd McDonald, the supervisor of arena and aquatic assets for the City of Winnipeg, explained how one of the older Freon-based cooling systems he oversees is struggling to keep up with Manitoba’s changing climate.
“We used to open it up probably in the third week of September going back 25 years ago, then about 10 to 12 years ago, we had to push the opening date to Oct. 1, because we’d start the plant at the same time, but it would take so many more days and weeks to remove the heat from the slab,” said McDonald, noting that refrigeration is not the creation of cold but rather the removal of heat.
“We’ve pushed it to Oct. 15 the last several years. This year in particular, we had an Oct. 15 opening date that had to be pushed back one week due to the fact the plant is running at 100 per cent efficiency, but we just can’t remove the heat as quickly as we used to be able to.”