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A man clears snow from his car during a snowstorm in Quebec City, December 15, 2013. Between 15 and 30cm of snow are expected to fall on the different regions of eastern Canada today, according to Environment Canada.Mathieu Belanger/Reuters

Flights were grounded at airports across the Maritimes on Sunday as a powerful snow storm blew through the region, knocking out power and causing whiteout driving conditions.

Winter storm warnings blanketed Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and most of New Brunswick as the intense storm blasted the provinces with heavy snow and high winds.

"It's a large storm that's affecting probably 80 or 90 per cent of the Maritime provinces," Environment Canada meteorologist Jean-Marc Couturier said in an interview on Sunday. "It's a large storm with a lot of punch, a lot of vigour."

Couturier said up to 30 centimetres of snow was expected for parts of Nova Scotia, with the snow changing to a mixture of ice pellets and freezing rain Sunday afternoon.

Southern New Brunswick was expected to get up to 45 centimetres of snow, while northern parts of the province would see up to 20 centimetres.

Up to 35 centimetres of snow was forecast for PEI before the storm passed through Nova Scotia and tracked towards Newfoundland overnight Sunday.

Dozens of flights at the Halifax Stanfield International Airport, the Fredericton International Airport and the Charlottetown Airport were cancelled as the provinces grappled with winds up to 90 kilometres an hour.

"With the high winds, we are expecting a lot of blowing snow," said Couturier from Halifax. "Large snow drifts will form in certain areas and there's poor visibility."

More than 5,500 Nova Scotia Power customers from across the province were without power on Sunday evening. Power was also knocked out for nearly 2,000 NB Power customers in Sackville, N.B., and St. Stephen, N.B.

Ferry crossings between Nova Scotia, PEI and New Brunswick were cancelled.

VIA Rail Canada, however, said its trains were operating according to schedule Sunday despite the poor weather.

RCMP were advising people to stay off the roads or drive with extreme caution as blowing snow was creating limited visibility and slippery driving conditions. Police said multiple cars had gone off the road, but no injuries were reported.

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