Convective Discussion.
It should be active afternoon and evening for much of western New Brunswick and into the rest of the Maritimes and Labrador overnight as a short wave trough extending from a low pressure system over Hudson Bay tracks through the region.
A warm front has been producing some heavy showers and occasional embedded thundershowers this morning over Maine which will continue into New Brunswick and the Bay of Fundy but will also continue to fizzle into the afternoon. The cold front is not far behind over southern Quebec and will begin to track through New Brunswick late this afternoon and into tomorrow morning over Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.
For New Brunswick behind the warm front this morning, there should be some clearing in the warm sector ahead of the approaching cold front this afternoon. Low-level moisture is already quite high in the region with dew points 18-20C and precipitable water values reaching 40 mm. Surface based convection is expected to begin this afternoon as temperatures reach the mid 20s given sufficient clearing. Upper divergence and further cooling aloft will provide further instability into the afternoon with CAPE values nearing 1000 J/kg over northwestern New Brunswick. Low to mid-level shear is also expected to increase to 30-40KT by the evening. These ingredients will all help to initiate and potentially sustain severe thunderstorms into the evening. Multicells may organize into bow lines or supercells ahead of the cold front. The main threat will be heavy downpours, strong wind gusts, and small hail. The potential for a tornado cannot be ruled out given the amount of low-level shear mainly over northwestern New Brunswick as well.
Over Labrador, there risk of non-severe thunderstorms over central and western areas as late this afternoon and evening as the trough from the low pressure centre over Hudson Bay progresses northeastward. Locally heavy downpours are possible.
Regional Impacts.
New Brunswick: Strong wind gusts which may approach 90 km/h, locally heavy downpours(25+mm), and small hail (1-2cm.
Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island: Locally heavy downpours and strong wind gusts.
Labrador: Locally heavy downpours
Newfoundland: Nil

Roberta McArthur