Most people will have power restored by 6 p.m. on Friday, according to Nova Scotia Power's website.

The utility had originally estimated power would be restored by 11:30 p.m. Thursday. 

As of 9:05 a.m., there were 108 Nova Scotia Power customers affected.

Tiffany Chase, a spokesperson for the utility, said those still waiting to be "restored include a small number of customers in remote, hard-to-access locations such as Tancook Island, seasonal customers who agreed to low priority restoration status, and customers with damage to their electrical system which requires repairs."

There is one outage on the map which has a restoration time of 11:45 p.m. Friday. Chase said that it at a seasonally-used building and doesn't need to be reconnected immediately.

She said all customers still waiting to be reconnected have been contacted.

The company has repeatedly changed the estimated restoration time over the last few days since power was knocked out to about 158,000 customers after an intense Christmas Day wind storm. 

The company has said its priority has been to fix the larger outages and now it's getting to the smaller ones, which crews found more complex than they expected after getting a closer look at the damage.

The highest concentration of outages is along the South Shore. Winds across Nova Scotia reached 110 km/h during the storm.

Cold temperatures are expected to continue across Nova Scotia with wind chill values of below –20 C.

The cold weather is expected to stick around through the weekend.

There are a few flights travelling to and from Halifax Stanfield International Airport on Friday that are delayed or cancelled.

Meanwhile, Marine Atlantic ferries between Newfoundland and Cape Breton sailed for the first time in days Thursday night after a break in the weather.