Scientific Sovereignty — How Canadian scientists are coping with U.S. cuts and chaos

Scientific Sovereignty — How Canadian scientists are coping with U.S. cuts and chaos

Published on Jun 20
54分钟
Quirks and Quarks
0:00
0:00
<p>Politically-driven chaos is disrupting U.S. scientific institutions and creating challenges for science in Canada. Science is a global endeavour and collaborations with the U.S. are routine. In this special episode of&nbsp;Quirks &amp; Quarks, we explore what Canadian scientists are doing to preserve their work to assert scientific sovereignty in the face of this unprecedented destabilization.&nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Canadian climate scientists brace for cuts to climate science infrastructure and data&nbsp;</strong></p><p>U.S. President Donald Trump’s attacks on climate science are putting our Earth observing systems, in the oceans and in orbit, at risk. Canadian scientists who rely on U.S. led climate data infrastructure worry about losing long-term data that would affect our ability to understand our changing climate.&nbsp;</p><p>With:&nbsp;</p><p>Kate Moran, the president and CEO of Ocean Networks Canada and Emeritus Professor of Oceanography at the University of Victoria&...