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The University of Toronto community works actively with private, public and civil society partners on sustainability issues, projects, and coalitions. In this respect, members of our academic community in groups large and small act as agents of change in the service of sustainability.

This page links to a collection of stories about some of the efforts undertaken by members of our community.

U of T researcher signs on to charter aimed at making Toronto ‘flood resilient’: Toronto Star

Fadi Masoud, an assistant professor of landscape architecture and urbanism at the John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design, has signed on to a landmark charter that will see representatives of municipal and provincial agencies work together to find ways to reduce urban flooding in Toronto. 

Signatories to the Flood Resilient Toronto Charter – which include officials from Toronto Hydro, the Toronto Transit Commission, Conservation Ontario and the provincial environment ministry – will use cutting-edge data and collaborative projects to identify and protect city locations most vulnerable to flooding from storm water, the Toronto Star reported.

Original article

U of T researchers sign on to call for action on climate change

U of T researchers from a variety of backgrounds are among the more than 15,000 scientists from around the world who have signed onto a recent call to action on climate change.

Original post

The last straw: U of T ecology expert, students create inventory of plastic litter that collects in the Don River

On a hot and muggy July day, Chelsea Rochman, an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Toronto, and a group of students made their way to the mouth of the Don River, armed with gardening gloves, garbage bags and a first aid kit.

Original article

Planning for climate change impact: U of T students roll out designs for a south Florida county

A group of architecture students at the University of Toronto tapped into their creativity, planning and design skills to reimagine new ways southern Florida can tackle climate change-related flooding, rising water levels and salt water entering canals and corroding existing infrastructure.

Original article

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