Global Water Futures
Global Water Futures
  • Видео 168
  • Просмотров 19 161
Global Water Futures Observatories Launch Event - April 17, 2024
Nationwide launch of the Global Water Futures Observatories (GWFO), Canada's premier national university-operated scientific freshwater observation network. The event highlighted how GWFO plays a pivotal role in advancing our understanding of water resources and sustainability through a network of instrumented water observing sites, supported by deployable observing systems and major laboratories, that provides open access water data.
For more information, visit: gwfo.ca
Просмотров: 109

Видео

World Day for Glaciers: The State and Fate of Canada's Snow and Ice
Просмотров 1086 месяцев назад
Presented on March 21st, the Canadian Committee for the UN International Year of Glaciers' Preservation introduced the UN Glacier Year and its significance in Canada. This event featured three presentations: John Pomeroy: Observations and predictions of changing mountain snow, ice and water. Alison Criscitiello: Contaminant transfer in the Canadian Arctic. Bob Sandford: The importance of snow a...
Behind the Exhibit: Deep Time
Просмотров 1457 месяцев назад
Take a dive behind the Virtual Water Gallery (virtualwatergallery.ca) exhibit and learn about the collaborative process and inspiration that led to the Deep Time art-science project.
Behind the Exhibit: Life Support
Просмотров 718 месяцев назад
Take a dive behind the Virtual Water Gallery (virtualwatergallery.ca) exhibit and learn about the collaborative process and inspiration that led to the Life Support art-science project.
L'eau - au cœur de la crise climatique
Просмотров 35Год назад
Bienvenue à la quatrième série de conférences Women Plus Water en 2023 à l'Université de la Saskatchewan, en l'honneur de la Journée mondiale de l'eau (22 mars 2023). Women Plus Water est ravie d'organiser une conversation sur la crise du climat et de l'eau. L'hôte, le Dr Inonge Milupi, et les invités, le Dr Martina Angela Caretta et la professeure Tahseen Jafry, présenteront leurs perspectives...
Réseaux d'eau des femmes Catalyseurs du changement
Просмотров 5Год назад
Bienvenue à la deuxième conférence Women Plus Water en 2023 à l'Université de la Saskatchewan. Rejoignez l'animatrice Dr Leila Eamen et les invités Dr Li Li, Dr Ellen Wohl et Jennifer Mandeville pour une table ronde sur les « Réseaux de femmes pour l'eau » en tant que catalyseur du changement. Cet événement est en l'honneur de la Journée internationale des Nations Unies pour les femmes et les f...
Diplomatie de l'eau Naviguer dans l'espace entre objectifs communs et visions concurrentes
Просмотров 20Год назад
Bienvenue à la première conférence Women Plus Water à l'Université de la Saskatchewan en 2023. La Dre Kelsey Leonard anime une table ronde sur la diplomatie de l'eau du point de vue des eaux autochtones, de l'innovation sociale et environnementale et de la gouvernance de l'eau. Les invités Dr Margot Hulbert, Foman Forough, Elizabeth Koch et Merrell-Anne Phare partagent leur expertise et leurs i...
Avertissements et cartes d’inondation Modèles et outils d’eau en pratique
Просмотров 24Год назад
Bienvenue à la troisième conférence Women Plus Water en 2023 à l'Université de la Saskatchewan. Rejoignez l'animatrice Dr Chandra Rajulapati alors qu'elle discute avec les invités Dr Monireh Faramarzi et Dr Tricia Stadnyk des applications pratiques de la modélisation. Les sujets incluront les impacts du changement climatique sur l'approvisionnement et la demande en eau d'un point de vue agricol...
GWF Finale - Discours de clôture et remarques
Просмотров 17Год назад
GWF Finale - Discours de clôture et remarques
GWF Finale - Bienvenue et présentation
Просмотров 12Год назад
GWF Finale - Bienvenue et présentation
GWF Finale - Wednesday, May 17, 2023
Просмотров 66Год назад
Day 3 of the GWF Finale (annual open science meeting): 00:00:00 - Observatories, Observations, and Sensors 01:01:22 - Poster Lightning Talks 01:16:03 - Changing International Water 02:14:59 - Human Dimensions 03:18:00 - Closing Statement and Remarks
GWF Finale - Tuesday, May 16, 2023 - Afternoon
Просмотров 65Год назад
Day 2 afternoon of the GWF Finale (annual open science meeting): 00:00:00 - Luncheon Speaker: Terry Duguid 00:11:24 - Poster Lightning Talks 00:28:25 - Changing Forested Basins 01:34:26 - Changing Lakes, Ponds, and Wetlands 02:40:59 - Poster Lightning Talks
GWF Finale - Tuesday, May 16, 2023 - Morning
Просмотров 38Год назад
Day 2 morning of the GWF Finale (annual open science meeting): 00:00:00 - Changing Agricultural Basins 01:03:52 - Poster Lightning Talks 01:21:36 - Changing Groundwater
GWF Finale - Monday, May 15, 2023 - Morning
Просмотров 79Год назад
Day 1 of the GWF Finale (annual open science meeting): 00:00:00 - Welcome and Introduction 01:15:08 - Changing Climate and Extremes 02:16:34 - Poster Lightning Talks 02:34:34 - Changing Water Budgets, Cryosphere and Rivers
Civil Society Action for Sustainable Water Futures
Просмотров 33Год назад
2023 Women Plus Water Lecture Series Civil Society Action for Sustainable Water Futures Dr. Louise Arnal hosts a conversation on Civil Society Action for Sustainable Water Futures with guests Anita Collins, Makaśa Looking Horse, and Hailey Krolyk. The conversation includes perspectives on Indigenous leadership, activism, and applied conservation research. For more information on how the guests ...
GWF2022 - Hydrology & Terrestrial Ecosystems (Permafrost, Groundwater, Soil Moisture)
Просмотров 23Год назад
GWF2022 - Hydrology & Terrestrial Ecosystems (Permafrost, Groundwater, Soil Moisture)
GWF2022 - Our Waters: Saskatchewan River Delta
Просмотров 56Год назад
GWF2022 - Our Waters: Saskatchewan River Delta
GWF2022 - Human Dimensions (1)
Просмотров 29Год назад
GWF2022 - Human Dimensions (1)
GWF2022 - Water Quality (General)
Просмотров 13Год назад
GWF2022 - Water Quality (General)
GWF2022 - Hydrology & Terrestrial Ecosystems (Model Developments & Applications)
Просмотров 25Год назад
GWF2022 - Hydrology & Terrestrial Ecosystems (Model Developments & Applications)
GWF2022 - Aquatic Ecology
Просмотров 27Год назад
GWF2022 - Aquatic Ecology
GWF2022 - Water Quality (Nutrients)
Просмотров 13Год назад
GWF2022 - Water Quality (Nutrients)
GWF2022 - Our Waters: Redberry Lake
Просмотров 31Год назад
GWF2022 - Our Waters: Redberry Lake
GWF2022 - Our Waters: Grand River
Просмотров 13Год назад
GWF2022 - Our Waters: Grand River
GWF2022 - Hydrology & Terrestrial Ecosystems (Model Techniques)
Просмотров 28Год назад
GWF2022 - Hydrology & Terrestrial Ecosystems (Model Techniques)
GWF2022 - Human Dimensions (2)
Просмотров 16Год назад
GWF2022 - Human Dimensions (2)
GWF2022 - Hydrometeorology, Atmosphere & Extremes
Просмотров 27Год назад
GWF2022 - Hydrometeorology, Atmosphere & Extremes
GWF2021 - Day 1 Opening and Morning Plenary
Просмотров 35Год назад
GWF2021 - Day 1 Opening and Morning Plenary
GWF2021 - Day 2 Morning Plenary with Keynote Talks
Просмотров 10Год назад
GWF2021 - Day 2 Morning Plenary with Keynote Talks
GWF2021 - Day 3 Afternoon Plenary Panel and Closing
Просмотров 36Год назад
GWF2021 - Day 3 Afternoon Plenary Panel and Closing

Комментарии

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 7 месяцев назад

    Fu d 4 to t é uma pessoa muito boa noite toda e é muito linda e é muito forte essa música é linda minha amiga e o número é o nome é muito lindo o nome é muito lindo e o número w tem o nome t o número e o tempo todo o nome

  • @argun1928
    @argun1928 9 месяцев назад

    extra ordinary..thanks for sharing

  • @mariamidowu9708
    @mariamidowu9708 Год назад

    Excellent presentation. Thank you very much.

  • @joannamariaochoa6830
    @joannamariaochoa6830 Год назад

    Banco de buretas en cabina de seguridad con uso de carbón activado

  • @OldScientist
    @OldScientist Год назад

    There has been a 10% decline in natural disasters since 2000 (CRED). Globally the ACE index (accumulated cyclone energy) 1980-2021 shows no increasing trend. Global Hurricane Landfalls 1970-2021 (updated from Weinkle et al, 2012) shows no trend. Satellite data since 1980 shows a slight downward global trend for total hurricaine numbers with 2021 being a record low year. From the NOAA GFDL website 'Global Warming and Hurricanes, An Overview of Current Research' (dated Feb. 9, 2023). And I quote "We conclude that the historical Atlantic hurricane data at this stage do not provide compelling evidence for a substantial greenhouse warming-induced century-scale increase in: frequency of tropical storms, hurricanes, or major hurricanes, or in the proportion of hurricanes that become major hurricanes." Multidecadal variability in Atlantic hurricaines is most probably related to the AMO (Vecchi et al, 2021). NOAA data 1851-2021 shows no trend in number of hurricaine landfalls with the record high being 1886. It makes no difference if you look at the Pacific. Using data from the JMA 1951-2022 we see typhoon activity trending downwards for over 7 decades. What the data from NOAA SPC shows about tornados: EF1-EF5 (1954-2022) no trend; EF3-EF5 (most destructive) (1954-2022) 50% decline. No EF5s in US since 2013 (a record absence). The Global Land Precipitation Anomaly from AR5 will disappoint with deviations from the average increasing by 0.2% per decade, but if you look at the actual data, it's just very variable over the decades. Drought appears to be decreasing globally (Watts et al, 2018) measured by SPI 1901-2017. For every million people on earth, annual deaths from climate-related causes (extreme temperature, drought, flood, storms, wildfires) declined 98%--from an average of 247 per year during the 1920s to 2.5 in per year during the 2010s. Data on disaster deaths come from (EM-DAT, CRED / UCLouvain, Brussels,Belgium. ) Globally 2000-2019 there was a large decrease in cold-related deaths and a moderate increase in heat-related deaths (Zhao, 2021, Lancet). However, coldwaves are over 9 times more likely to kill than heatwaves, so the overall result is very beneficial. Deserts have shrunk considerably since the 1980's. The Sahara shrank by 12,000km² per year 1984-2015(Liu & Xue, 2020). The Earth has greened by 15% or more in a human lifetime. "The greening of the planet over the last two decades represents an increase in leaf area on plants and trees equivalent to the area covered by all the Amazon rainforests. There are now more than two million square miles of extra green leaf area per year"(NASA, 2019). Global tree canopy cover increased by 2.24 million square kilometers (865,000 square miles) between 1982 and 2016 (Nature, 2018). As well as human intervention, the reasons for this include forests expanding polewards aided by additional CO2 and a slight rise in temperature. The Great Barrier Reef's coral cover has reached the greatest extent ever recorded (AIMS). If you look at the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network (GCRMN) data, the WIO (West Indian Ocean) shows 26% hard coral cover in 1985 upto 30% in 2020. South Asia reefs shows a decline around 2000 to below 25% then a regrowth to around 40% (2010) and a decline to 25% (2020). The Red Sea shows no change at around 25% (1995-2020). So the pattern in these three areas show no relationship to each other or to a changing climate. GCRMN data for the most important coral bioregion, the East Asia Seas, with 30% of the world’s coral reefs, and containing the most diverse coral of the ‘Coral Triangle’, show no statistically significant net coral loss since records began. The East Asia region has the biggest human population living in close proximity to reefs, and is located in the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool - the hottest major water mass on earth. On extinction the rate is very low: 900 known lost species for 2.1 million known species in 500 years (IUCN), so from observations there are an average of slightly less than 2 species lost every year. Out of a known species total of over 2 million. That gives an annual percentage loss of less than 0.0001%. That's background extinction. At that frequency it will take over 930,000 years to reach 80% extinction of species experienced at the K-T boundary that saw the extinction of the dinosaurs. Of course, extinction is a natural part of the evolution of life on this planet with the average lifespan of a species thought to be about 1 million years (cf 930,000). It is estimated that 99.9% of all plant and animal species that have existed have gone extinct. It should also be noted that no genera have become extinct in the last 500 years. Global temperatures maxed out in 2016 and have been lower ever since (UAH v6 global satellite data). There is no climate crisis.

  • @tadde948
    @tadde948 Год назад

    Great. Fast results only > 🄿🅁🄾🄼🄾🅂🄼

  • @pavlovezdenetsky7824
    @pavlovezdenetsky7824 2 года назад

    Very good webinar! Thnx for posting

  • @waqarhussain6183
    @waqarhussain6183 2 года назад

    informative thanks for your efforts

  • @desmundmonteagudo8859
    @desmundmonteagudo8859 2 года назад

    😜 ρгό𝔪σŞm

  • @bastienclee9744
    @bastienclee9744 2 года назад

    INEPENDANT WESTERN NATION IS THE ONLY SOLUTION. EASTERN CHIEFS, POLITICIANS YOU TAKE CARE OF THE EASTERN PROVINCE OF ONTARIO, AND THE WEST CAN TAKE CARE OF OURSELVES. NO MORE BILLIONS OF INDIGENOUS AND WESTERN RESOURCES FOR YOU. YOU'VE DONE NOTHING BUT SQUANDER IT THIS INCLUDES EASTERN INAC CHIEFS LIKE DEBASSIGE.

  • @jackv6477
    @jackv6477 3 года назад

    Drill Wells problem- solved... next

  • @dancingbabybins
    @dancingbabybins 3 года назад

    from what i can see you guys intend for the CWA to be a giant bloated government program with dozen of groups to argue about their access to funding likely

  • @sourovpaul1599
    @sourovpaul1599 3 года назад

    Great works! Best wishes

  • @NickFortier
    @NickFortier 3 года назад

    So, after 5 years, what is the plan exactly for giving northern native reserves safe and clean drinking water? Risks from climate change? To water?