Other Current information on Canada Highways |
| Most dangerous highways in Canada 2009 |
| Canadian highways are in need of serious and immediate improvements. You can see a list below for the most deadly roads in Canada even this year 2009. |
| 1) A 50-kilometre stretch of Highway 11, between Lac du Bonnet and Traverse Bay in eastern Manitoba, is the province’s most dangerous highway. It took a toll of around 5 last year which can be said as a big number for such a small stretched highway. |
| 2) Highway 103 along the South Shore of Nova Scotia. According to the provincial Department of Transportation, 29 people have lost their life in crashes on Highway 103 since 2006. |
| 3) The six-kilometer stretch of Trans Canada Highway in Headingley is an extremely busy highway, averaging 18,000 vehicles daily. It records more than 100 accidents in recent years |
| 4) A succession of horrifying traffic accidents has flawed the stretch of single-lane park highway between Banff and the British Columbia boundary. Bill Fisher, director general for Parks Canada’s western and northern region, said the already twinned sections have provided “significant reductions in wildlife mortality.” |
| 5) Highway 401 between Whites Rdin Pickering and Courtice Rd. east of Oshawa is another accident prone region according to Ontario Provincial Police data obtained by the Toronto Star. You are most likely to get involved in a car accident on these roads. |
| 6)The section of the Trans-Canada Highway (HWY 1) running through Yoho National Park to Golden, British Columbia. There are also records of collision between wildlife and passing vehicles on these highways resulting in loss of wildlife and human fatalities. |
| 7) 883 collisions, 17 killed at the stretch of Highway 11 between Saskatoon and Prince Albert between 2003 and 2007. |
| 8) The road from Tibbitt to Contwoyto is considered one of the most dangerous routes in the world. The dangerous part is that most of the roads are covered by ice here. |