CH Views Published in Calgary Herald

CH Director Prof. John Pomeroy has again been in demand by the media: his views were sought by the Calgary Herald for an article on the increasing risks of natural hazards as a consequence of a changing climate. The piece is available online here.

CH Student Wins Awards

Congratulations to Phillip Harder, who has had a very good week: he was not only awarded a Dean’s Scholarship for his PhD studies at the Centre for Hydrology, but also the D.M. Gray Award for best student paper in hydrology at the Canadian Geophysical Union’s annual meeting.
Phillip’s paper was based on his MSc research on the assessment of uncertainty in hydrological models introduced by non-physical precipitation phase calculations.
Well done Phillip!

Changing Cold Regions Network Announced

The Centre for Hydrology will play a major role in the new Changing Cold Regions Network (CCRN), for which NSERC announced funding of $5 million as part of the five year Climate Change and Atmospheric Research (CCAR) Initiative. The Network of over 50 researchers from Canada, USA, China, UK, France and Germany is headquartered at the University of Saskatchewan, and led by Professor Howard Wheater.
CCRN aims to understand, diagnose and predict interactions among the cryospheric, ecological, hydrological and climatic components of the changing Earth system at multiple scales, with a focus on the Saskatchewan and Peace-Athabasca-Mackenzie River Basins. It will improve our understanding of recent Earth system change in the cold interior of Canada, advance prediction of water, weather, and climate, improve our hydrological, ecological and climatological modeling capability, enhance our capacity for water management, and train the next generation of hydrologists.
The network will support research at several Centre for Hydrology research basins in the Canadian Rockies, Yukon, Northwest Territories and Saskatchewan, provide funds for enhanced student training, and enable further development of the Cold Regions Hydrological Model. The funding of the network at this time is very important, given the extreme weather and water events and rapid climate change which have become evident in western and northern Canada.
Professor John Pomeroy announced the funding of the new network at the American Geophysical Union Meeting of the Americas in Cancun, Mexico on 17 May 2013. The presentation may be viewed here.

CH / CCRN in Calgary Herald

The Calgary Herald has published an article highlighting announcement of the Changing Cold Region Network, a major new research initiative in which CH will play a leading role: the page is available here.

CH Provides Insights on Flood-Risk to Media

Members past and present of the Centre for Hydrology have again been asked by various branches of the media to provide insights relating to snowmelt and the potential for flooding in Saskatchewan.
CH Director Prof. John Pomeroy and alumna Nathalie Brunet both contributed to a piece broadcast by the French language service of Radio Canada, which focused on the challenges of predicting flood risk in the Province, and the potential for automating forecasting methods. The clip is available here.
Dr Cherie Westbrook was asked by Global TV about the likelihood of imminent flooding in and around Saskatoon: the interview is available online here.
Prof. Pomeroy also provided an overview of the role of albedo in governing the timing and rate of snowmelt for The Afternoon Edition on Radio Canada: the interview is posted here and here.
The same theme was covered in an agricultural context by The Western Producer: the article is available here.

CH contributes to Calgary Herald article

Centre for Hydrology Director Prof. John Pomeroy was asked to contribute to an article in the Calgary Herald, published on 6th April 2013.
The piece looked at the likely prospects for water resources, and risks of both drought and flood, as implied by the spring snowpack on both sides of the Great Divide.
It is available for online viewing here

Opportunities in the Changing Cold Regions Network

The Changing Cold Regions Network (CCRN) is a major new initiative to be led by the Global Institute for Water Security, with substantial participation by members of the Centre for Hydrology, and linking 8 Canadian universities, 4 government agencies and 15 key international academic collaborators.
Participants will study interactions between cryospheric, ecological, hydrological and climate components at multiple scales, with particular emphasis on Western Canada’s rapidly changing cold interior, including the Western Cordillera, Western Boreal Forest, Lowland Permafrost and Prairies, the Saskatchewan, Mackenzie and Peace-Athabasca basins, and the regional climate system.
The network is now seeking a number of world-class post-graduate students and post-doctoral fellows, as detailed in the full listing available in PDF format here. More information about GIWS is available at www.usask.ca/water.

News media cover Marmot Creek Workshop

In late February, the Centre for Hydrology hosted a workshop at its Coldwater Lab (located at the University of Calgary’s BioGeoScience Institute near Kananaskis), to mark 50 years of activity at the nearby Marmot Creek Research Basin.
The meeting generated interest from several local and regional newspapers;
Calgary Herald, 4th March 2013
Rocky Mountain Outlook, 14th March 2013
Rocky Mountain Outlook, 14th February 2013
Calgary Herald, 23rd February 2013
Saskatoon Star Phoenix, 25th February 2013
Rocky Mountain Outlook, 14th March 2013
Information about the workshop, including presentations given by a range of eminent hydrologists and CH alumni, is available here

CH on CKOM

Nicholas Kinar, a PhD student at the University of Saskatchewan’s Centre for Hydrology, was interviewed recently by CKOM – News Talk 650 Radio, about his innovative System for the Acoustic Sensing of Snow (SAS2), which uses sound-waves to infer properties such as density, depth, temperature and wetness.
Details are available on the station’s website, here.