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Climate tracker initiative launches in Charlottetown and Stratford

Community contributions to help inform local climate change adaptation efforts
| Community
Dr. Adam Fenech
Dr. Adam Fenech

The following is a media release issued by the City of Charlottetown on April 20, 2022:

The City of Charlottetown, in partnership with the Town of Stratford and the School of Climate Change and Adaptation at the 69传媒 (UPEI), has launched Climate Trackers鈥攁 new citizen-science based sustainability initiative. Community members are being invited to note their observations related to seasonal changes, weather, plants and wildlife, drainage, flooding and more around their home or local neighbourhood. The goal of the initiative is to use data from the community contributions to better understand the local impacts of climate change.

Climate Trackers is a family-friendly initiative that does not require any previous science or data collection experience. As an individual, or a group, participants will be asked to note observations from around their property or local neighbourhood on a regular basis鈥攆or example, this could be daily, weekly or anytime something in nature catches the participants attention.

Registered Climate Trackers will receive a hard copy Climate Diary along with a Nature Guide that features colour photos and descriptions of plants and animals on PEI to help identify and track their observations. To contribute to local climate science, participants are asked to add these observations to the 69传媒Climate Diary app. The inputs will be used by climatologists at 69传媒for research purposes and by municipal staff to help inform climate change adaptation efforts. To learn more and report observations to the app, visit .
 
Interested in learning more? The City of Charlottetown, along with its partners, is hosting an information session on May 17 at 6:00 p.m. at the 69传媒Faculty Lounge in SDU Main Building. An introductory presentation with Frequently Asked Questions is also available online. To learn more, visit or .
 
Throughout the year, participants will also be invited to learn more about nature and local climate change impacts through free local workshops and other activities. Upcoming workshops are open to all residents of both municipalities and include:

鈥    Signs of Spring Outdoor 鈥榃alkshop鈥 at Robert Cotton Park, 57 Burnbury Road, Stratford, Saturday, May 28, from 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.
鈥    PEI Invasive Species and Climate Change at the PEI Farm Centre, 420 University Avenue, Charlottetown, Tuesday, May 31, from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
鈥    Local Climate Change Indicators at West Royalty Community Centre, 1 Kirkdale Road, Charlottetown, Wednesday, June 8, from 6:00 p.m. to 7:45 p.m.

To register, visit . Information session and workshop participants will also be invited to enter a ballot for their chance to win nature-related prizes such as $50 garden centre gift cards, bird feeders, and binoculars.

To become a Climate Tracker and to learn more, visit .

Quotes:

鈥淭he Climate Trackers program is an inventive, homegrown approach to raising awareness about our changing climate and its local impacts. Protecting our natural environments is a responsibility we all share, and this is a fantastic opportunity to contribute as citizen scientists to this collective endeavour.鈥
 鈥擯hilip Brown, Mayor, City of Charlottetown

鈥淧rograms such as Climate Trackers are an important part of developing community minded residents. A program like this encourages residents to be aware of their environment, take ownership of the environment around them and to become a citizen scientist. The data they can help us collect is useful in watching for trends over time and for one-off or unique observations that may indicate a change which the Town can adapt to as needed. I encourage all residents to join me and sign up.鈥
鈥擲teve Ogden, Mayor, Town of Stratford

鈥淲e're excited to partner with the City of Charlottetown and Town of Stratford on the Climate Trackers initiative. To track changes in climate, researchers need observations, monitoring, and data sets to be collected. Engaging community members as citizen scientists allows us to collect information on a larger scale, making it useful in identifying climate change trends and developing the management plans needed to adapt to a changing climate.鈥
 鈥擠r. Adam Fenech, associate professor, 69传媒School of Climate Change and Adaptation, and director, 69传媒Climate Lab

For media inquiries, please contact:

Carly Siopis
Communications Coordinator
City of Charlottetown
902.393.9070
csiopis@charlottetown.ca
 
Wendy Watts
Community and Business Engagement Manager
Town of Stratford
902.569.1995
wwatts@townofstratford.ca

Media Contact

Anna MacDonald
Communications Officer
Marketing and Communications
902-566-0949

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