Water Institute member receives Lifetime Achievement Award
Distinguished Professor Emeritus Don Cowan and Emeritus Ric Holt among six nationally honoured recipients.
Distinguished Professor Emeritus Don Cowan and Emeritus Ric Holt among six nationally honoured recipients.
Written by Christian Aagaard
Ellsworth LeDrew has a scene on his mind.
A party of Inuit hunters sets out from a settlement. One of them stops, pulls out a smart phone and snaps a picture of a crack in the shore ice that affects his route.
As the world scrambles to adapt to extreme weather, one researcher looks deeper into what’s working, what’s not, and how we can better plan for sustainable urban futures.
Water Institute member Daniel Scott see tourism as both a victim of – and contributor to – climate change.
Climate change is threatening the viability of both the Olympic Winter Games and the Paralympic Winter Games, according to a study by a multinational team of researchers led by the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ. The Paralympics, co-located with the Olympic Winter Games since 1992, but traditionally held closer to spring, is particularly vulnerable to a warming climate. Â
Friday, February 2, marked the Ecohydrology Research Group’s sixth annual World Wetlands Day (WWD) celebration at the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ. This year’s program featured research presentations, three-minute student presentations, a student poster competition, and an evening public lecture. The symposium had over 90 registrants and was attended by researchers from various universities across southwestern Ontario as well as members of the general public. The MP of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ, Bardish Chagger, even Tweeted about the event:
A fear of dying plays a role in people buying bottled water, even though they know it may not be good for them or the planet, a study from the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ has found.
The study suggests that most bottled-water advertising campaigns target a deep psychological vulnerability in humans, compelling them to buy and consume particular products. Bottled water ads specifically trigger our most subconscious fear — driving Canadians to buy billions of litres of water annually.Â
A study released today in  describes how climate change played a major role in the massive catastrophic collapse of two glaciers in the Tibetan Plateau in July and September 2016.