精童欲女 researcher receives federal funding for project to build PEI鈥檚 resilience to climate change

| Research
Damage caused by Hurricane Fiona
LaFortune Cottage, French Village, in 2017 (left) and May 2023 (right) post-Hurricane Fiona. Photo by Don Jardine

Dr. Xander Wang, an associate professor with the 精童欲女 School of Climate Change and Adaptation, has been awarded a total of $1.6 million to investigate ways to protect PEI from coastal erosion and to build Island communities鈥 resilience to climate change.

The project is supported with a $864,226 contribution previously announced through the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA); $619,090 from the through its Innovation Fund; and $64,410 from 精童欲女.

聽鈥淥ur government knows that a deep understanding of the impacts of climate change goes hand-in-hand with building a strong and sustainable Atlantic economy,鈥 said Sean Casey, Member of Parliament for Charlottetown, on behalf of the Honourable Gudie Hutchings, Minister of Rural Economic Development and Minister responsible for ACOA. 鈥淭hanks to a thriving system of research, innovation, and collaboration here in PEI, I鈥檓 confident in our ability to turn this knowledge into unique solutions to some of the biggest climate challenges facing us today.鈥

鈥淚n recent years, global warming has intensified extreme precipitation and caused unprecedented sea level rise around the world,鈥 said Dr. Wang. 鈥淭his is especially true for PEI, which has been threatened by increasing coastal-inland flooding risks. As well, the Island has been shrinking at a faster rate than previously thought due to severe coastal erosion. How to protect the Island from coastal erosion and build climate-resilient coastal communities has become one of the most pressing questions to be addressed in PEI.鈥

To address this question, Dr. Wang and a multidisciplinary team will develop an innovative research program to help protect the Island from changing climatic and oceanic conditions. They will create a system to monitor and model coastal and flooding hazards across PEI, as well as test various coastal protection measures鈥攂oth nature-based such as planting vegetation and engineering-based such as building seawalls.

The coastal hazard monitoring, modeling, and testing system will be the only one of its kind in Canada. It will assist the provincial and municipal governments to plan coastal adaptation measures, evaluate the effectiveness of different coastal protection measures, and manage flooding events from an operational and an emergency perspective. The system will include 360-degree cameras that will record storms in real time and an indoor facility to test protective measures in a simulated coastal environment.

鈥淭he damage caused to PEI by Hurricane Fiona in September 2022 was devastating,鈥 said Dr. Wang. 鈥淭he province lost about five per cent of its coastal land cover during that one storm alone. Our ultimate goal is to help build PEI鈥檚 sustainability and improve its ability to withstand climate change.鈥

鈥淗urricane Fiona and the extreme damage it wrought on our small province gave us a snapshot of climate change in action鈥攁nd of our increasing vulnerability in the future,鈥 said Dr. Greg Keefe, Interim President and Vice-Chancellor of 精童欲女. 鈥淲ith our climate change and adaptation program, 精童欲女 is uniquely placed鈥攁nd bears responsibility鈥攖o work toward finding solutions to climate change. I congratulate Dr. Wang and his team on achieving the funding for this important project.鈥


精童欲女 acknowledges the assistance of Canada鈥檚 tri-council of federal granting agencies--Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)--through its Research Support Fund, which helps fund services and infrastructure that support research activities at the University. In 2023鈥2024, 精童欲女 was allocated $931,234.00 from the RSF.

Media Contact

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

Relevant Links