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Today in Canada > News > Millions of dollars in crop damage expected from Brooks hailstorm: insurance provider
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Millions of dollars in crop damage expected from Brooks hailstorm: insurance provider

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Last updated: 2025/08/29 at 4:45 PM
Press Room Published August 29, 2025
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The hailstorm that slammed the Brooks area, southeast of Calgary, on Aug. 20 is expected to cost millions in crop damage alone, according to insurance providers.

The powerful storm sent golf ball-sized hail smashing down and left a large swath of destruction stretching from Alberta to Saskatchewan, with windows smashed, siding ripped from homes, power lines knocked down and crops flattened.

More than 350 hail claims from the storm have already been filed, covering more than 350,000 acres of damage, according to George Kueber, claims adjusting manager for the Agriculture Financial Services Corp. (AFSC), a provincial Crown corporation that insures Alberta farmers.

The AFSC doesn’t have a final estimate on the cost of the storm yet because the inspectors still need to survey the damage firsthand, he said.

“But we do know it’s going to be in the millions, no question,” Kueber said.

More claims could still come in, since farmers have 14 days following the storm to file. Kueber said he does not expect the storm to cause premiums to rise. 

Months of work wiped out in minutes

Todd Green, director of agricultural services for Newell County, toured the damage in the days after the storm, where he saw crops including alfalfa and canola decimated, and stalks of corn once standing some 10 feet tall cut down to only a foot high. The county, which includes the city of Brooks is about 170 kilometres southeast of Calgary, and covers about 1.5 million acres of land.

“The amount of hail it takes to pulverize that into the ground, it’s crazy. It just looks like somebody has gone through and harvested already, and unfortunately that wasn’t the case,” Green said.

The timing of the storm — late in the season with harvest just around the corner — is a major disappointment to farmers, he added.

“All the seeding, all the herbicide applications, the checking, the irrigating, and the only thing that’s left is to harvest and reap the reward of that hard work … And then just to see it be gone in a matter of 20 to 30 minutes — I think it’s hard, difficult on people for sure.”

The storm was so strong it bent power transmission towers in the area. (Eli Ridder)

Winds equal to an EF1 tornado

Researchers from the Canadian Severe Storms Laboratory at Western University in London, Ont., visited the area to inspect the aftermath.

“It started out as a bit of a typical supercell thunderstorm that comes out of the foothills south of Calgary. But quickly transformed into a high wind, big hail producer,” said David Sills, director of the laboratory’s Northern Tornadoes Project. 

They used satellite imagery to measure the so-called ‘hail scar,’ showing the path of visible damage to crops and vegetation. The length covered 400 kilometres across, from Brant, Alta., about 100 kilometres southeast of Calgary, to Beechy Provincial Pasture in Saskatchewan, which is about 540 kilometres east of Calgary. The most severe damage stretched 11 kilometres wide from Brooks northward.

The researchers estimate winds reached up to 165 kilometres an hour — equivalent to an EF1 tornado.

Sills said they are still looking for damage reports to gain a fuller understanding of the storm’s impact. 

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