Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the summer semester of 2022 was on July 27th. Ana presented her study entitled, “Seasonal Aspects of Radiative and Advective Air Temperature Population: A Canadian Perspective”.… Read More


Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the summer semester of 2022 was on June 22nd. Andrew L presented his study entitled, “Data hiding in plain sight: retrieving historical snow depth measurements in northern Canada through staffed airport Meteorological Aerodrome Reports (METAR) ”.… Read More


Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the summer semester of 2022 was on May 25th. Micah presented his new study with his students entitled, “Urban Challenge Grant, Climate Change and Extreme Heat in Toronto (Canada): A Human Health Perspective”.… Read More


Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the winter semester of 2022 was on April 27th. Prof. Karen Smith presented her work related to stratospheric ozone and Arctic climate. She is a co-author for the 2022 WMO Ozone Assessment.… Read More


Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the winter semester of 2022 was on March 23rd. Bill presented his study with Andrew Leung (Ph.D.) entitled, “Are airport climates a “thing”?”.… Read More


Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the winter semester of 2022 was on February 25th. Vidya Anderson, Ph.D., presented her study entitled, “Enabling Nature-Based Solutions to Build Back Better—An Environmental Regulatory Impact Analysis of Green Infrastructure in Ontario, Canada”… Read More


Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the fall semester of 2021 was on November 24th. Andrew Apostoli presented his study, entitled, “Using Climate Models for General Climate Change Impact Assessments – Case Study: Ontario’s Great Clay Belt Region”.… Read More


On November 18, 2021, Raul gave an invited talk entitled, “A research agenda for affective dimensions in climate change risk perception and risk communication” at iSPEAC seminar series at the Department of Physical & Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough. Here is the description of his talk: Abstract: There is a growing body of literature… Read More


Our regular CL@UT meeting (online) for the fall semester of 2021 was on October 27th. Andrew Apostoli presented his study, entitled “A Comparison of Missing Data Imputation Methods for Canadian Climate Time Series Data“.… Read More