間眅埶AV

media release

間眅埶AV, UVic team receives $1 million to study climate solutions for rural, remote and Indigenous communities

April 20, 2023

Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions funds multi-partner research to create resilience, reduce emissions and lessen climate impacts

An interdisciplinary team from , the  and partner organizations will use $1 million from the  to study climate solutions for rural, remote and Indigenous communities in B.C.

 will investigate how these communities will be impacted by climate change and what they need to flourish despite its challenges. 

Researchers will work with the ,  and  to develop and deliver the research.

Together, the partners will determine what policies and innovations in housing practices and technical safety are needed to enable communities outside major urban centres to create low-carbon resilience, reducing both their carbon footprint and their vulnerability to the impacts of climate change.

The focus of the project is on preparing communities, people and economies for the coming climate impacts, says principal investigator Nancy Olewiler, a professor in 間眅埶AVs School of Public Policy, whose team includes  of 間眅埶AVs , professors  and Andrew Pape Salmon of UVics and colleagues from the University of Waterloo and the University of Washington.

Critical to the projects success is the pairing of technical knowledge from partner organizations with local knowledge among rural, remote and Indigenous communities, says Bristow.

Michael Sadler, executive director of the First Nations Housing and Infrastructure Council, agrees. We know we need to assist our Nations to create housing thats resilient and responsive to climate change, says Sadler. This resilience is not new for Indigenous Peoples. We have been expert builders from time immemorial, constructing advanced technological solutions for our respective locations and climates.

Adds Rod Hill, acting director, Indigenous Relations, BC Housing: Through this project, BC Housing aims to amplify the voices of Indigenous Peoples, to enable communities and community members to articulate the climate changes happening in their territory, and what measures they need to build resilience to address them.

While people living in urban centres feel the effects of climate change in heatwaves and extreme rains, Olewiler says their remote and rural counterparts face a larger variety of risks including wildfires, floods and landslides. These threaten lives, homes, and other buildings, as well as jobs and local economies and smaller population centres may have less capacity to address their risks.

Well be making discovery of what types of challenges communities are facing and then building strategy to ensure we can be proactive, instead of reactive, toward the changing landscape of climate interaction, says Marci McDougall, Technical Safety BCs leader of Indigenous reconciliation and partnerships.

Over the next four years, the project will entail designing practical frameworks to build climate resilience and capacity in these communities. Community findings and case studies will help inform updates to building and safety codes and standards, as well as regulations and policies.

The project team will be hosting a workshop for rural and remote First Nations in May to introduce the research goals, explore shared interests, and help develop community partners for the pilot studies.

Indigenous knowledge is a form of Indigenous science, and when we link that with academic scholarship and these organizations working in this space, were building knowledge that is holistic, integrative and respectful, says PICS executive director Ian Mauro. And thats what PICS stands for and will make a priority moving forward.

AVAILABLE 間眅埶AV EXPERT

NANCY OLEWILER, economist and professor, School of Public Policy
olewiler@sfu.ca (Limited availability)

CONTACT 

MELISSA SHAW, 間眅埶AV Communications & Marketing 
236.880.3297 | melissa_shaw@sfu.ca

CINDY MACDOUGALL, COMMUNICATIONS MANAGER, PICS 
250.853.3626/250.508.8154 | picscomm@uvic.ca

間眅埶AV 
 |  
778.782.3210

ABOUT SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY


As Canadas engaged university, 間眅埶AV works with communities, organizations and partners to create, share and embrace knowledge that improves life and generates real change. We deliver a world-class education with lifelong value that shapes change-makers, visionaries and problem-solvers. We connect research and innovation to entrepreneurship and industry to deliver sustainable, relevant solutions to todays problems. With campuses in British Columbias three largest citiesVancouver, Burnaby and Surrey間眅埶AV has eight faculties that deliver 364 undergraduate degree programs and 149 graduate degree programs to more than 37,000 students. The university now boasts more than 180,000 alumni residing in 145+ countries.

ABOUT THE PACIFIC INSTITUTE FOR CLIMATE SOLUTIONS

The Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions is a climate research collaboration between its four partner universities the University of Victoria, 間眅埶AV, the University of British Columbia, and the University of Northern British Columbia that develops innovative, evidence-based climate solutions knowledge actively used by decision-makers.

ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA

UVic is one of Canadas leading research-intensive universities, offering life-changing, hands-on learning experiences to more than 21,000 students on the edge of the spectacular BC coast. As a hub of transformational research, UVic faculty, staff and students make a critical difference on issues that matter to people, places and the planet. UVic consistently publishes a higher proportion of research based on international collaborations than any other university in North America, and our community and organizational partnerships play a key role in generating vital impact, from scientific and business breakthroughs to achievements in culture and creativity. Find out more at 

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