Changing Cold Regions Network

Predicting the unpredictable: How scientists are improving cold-region water and climate prediction models

Predicting the unpredictable: How scientists are improving cold-region water and climate prediction models

The world is changing rapidly, and the past is no longer a guide to the future in terms of extreme events and floods. That’s one of the findings from a report on the Changing Cold Regions Network (CCRN), a summary of the research program that wrapped up in 2018 and which recently compiled many of its scientific advances in a special issue of the journal Hydrology and Earth System Sciences.

‘Rapid and dramatic change’: U of S project aims to improve climate change predictions in western, northern Canada

‘Rapid and dramatic change’: U of S project aims to improve climate change predictions in western, northern Canada

The University of Saskatchewan (U of S) is hoping to improve western and northern Canada climate change predictions. Findings from the Changing Cold Regions Network (CCRN) – a collaboration between several universities, led by the U of S – suggest that climate change is making future extreme weather events difficult to predict. These disasters, such as wildfires or floods, will likely become more common and more severe, according to U of S research associate Chris DeBeer, the science manager for CCRN.