P-GraSC Quarterly Events
Throughout the year, the PCC graduate community hosts a variety of events for students to share their expertise on climate science in an academic setting.
They also host the Schooner Series (local Climate Science on Tap events) where the goal is to “serve up big topics in pint-sized packages with a fun, informative, conversation over a brew”. If you would like to learn more please email pgrasc_public_engagement@uw.edu.
2022-2023
Winter 2023
Climate on Tap
The Schooner Series is an opportunity for graduate students to foster communication and conversation with the public on topics including the causes, impacts and solutions to climate change, adapted from Cascadia Climate Action‘s Climate on Tap Series. This year, join us on March 8, 6-7:30 pm at Bickersons Brewhouse in Ballard to hear “Solutions to Climate Change: UW Grad Students in Hot Pursuit,” a showcase of a variety of unique climate solutions. Register here!
Speakers include:
- Climate Risk & Scenario Modeling: Articulating Impacts – Sam Shugart (MS Student), Foster School of Business
- Path to Decarbonization: Washington State’s Transition to 100% Renewable Energy – Annalise Stein (MPA Student), Evans School of Public Policy
- Restoring our Ocean’s Secret Weapon: a Deeper View into Seagrass Restoration and Population Resilience – Christine Nolan (PhD Student), Department of Biology
Fall 2022
Graduate Climate Conference
October 28-30, 2022
The 16th annual Graduate Climate Conference will be held at the Pack Forest Conference Center, located at the foot of Mount Rainier. This will be an amazing time for graduate students from a multitude of disciplines to come together and present their research and explore climate change from a variety of perspectives. Applications were due June 1, 2022!
2021-2022
Spring 2022
Climate on Tap
May 25, 7-8pm, at Bickersons Brewhouse in Ballard
The Schooner Series is back, live and in-person in collaboration with Cascadia Climate Action. Through this event, graduate students can foster communication and conversation with the public on topics including the causes, impacts and solutions to climate change. This year, the theme is “Climate Hazards in the Pacific Northwest.” We hope to see you there.
A series of three graduate student and postdoc research presentations will be followed by a brief discussion panel hosted by Joe Boomgard-Zagrodnik (ATM S alum). Info on speakers and topics are below:
- Climate impacts on shorebirds – Eduardo Gallo-Cajiao (Postdoctoral Fellow), School of Environmental and Marine Affairs
- Community impacts of wildfires and smoke – Michelle Pollowitz (MS Student), Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences
- Building resiliency around drought and flooding – Kate Decramer, Emma Diamond, Daniel Wear, Rajat Soni (MPA Students), Evans School of Public Policy and Governance
Admission is FREE, optional RSVP here (not required, but helpful!)
Spring Symposium
May 12 at 4:00-7:00 pm
The Spring Symposium is back! We gathered on Thursday, May 19th, from 5:30 to 7:30 pm in Fishery Sciences Building 102. for five ten-minute talks in FSH 102 followed by appetizers and drinks in the FSH lobby.
This year’s spring symposium featured five phenomenal speakers:
- Nicolas Wittstock (Political Science), “East-West Technology Transfer and the US Clean Energy Policy Trilemma”
- Molly Wieringa (Atmospheric Sciences), “High Frequency Sea Ice Variability: Do We Know What We Think We Know?”
- Daaniya Iyaz (Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences), “All Fired Up: Looking at the Impact of Wildfire Smoke on Seattle Children’s Hospital Patients”
- Greta Shum (ACORN Project), “Frackalachia: How Natural Gas Failed Communities in the Ohio River Valley”
- Cassidy Berlin (Evans School Capstone Project), “Evan School capstone project on Lakewood City Climate Action”
- Amy Wyeth (Oceanography), “Effects of hypoxia and acidification on the swimming behavior of Calanus pacificus: Lethal and sublethal responses to stressful conditions”
Fall 2021
Graduate Climate Conference
October 29-31, Virtual
The 15th annual Graduate Climate Conference (GCC) served as an interdisciplinary forum for graduate students to present their climate-related research and discuss climate change through a variety of perspectives.
2020-2021
Winter 2021
Climate on Tap
March 4 at 5:00 pm, Virtual
As part of the Virtual Schooner Series, Max Showalter, Hally Stone, and George Thomas Jr. gave talks on “Climate policy and the science that supports it.”
Trivia Night
Friday, February 5, 2021 at 5:30 pm, Virtual
The PCC hosted a Trivia Night, open to the UW members, friends, and family, complete with prizes!
Fall 2020
Graduate Climate Conference
Oct 30-Nov 1, 2020, Virtual
2020 marked the 14th annual Graduate Climate Conference (GCC), an interdisciplinary climate conference that provides a forum for graduate students of all disciplines to present relevant research and share ideas on climate and climate change from a multitude of perspectives. Read more about it here.
2019-2020
Spring 2020
See PCC Seminars page.
Winter 2020
Graduate Student Seminar
Thursday, March 5 at 5pm in ATG 610
Sam Brenner (Oceanography) on the role of sea ice in air-sea coupling, and how that is changing in a changing Arctic & Lila Westreich (SEFS) on the foraging behavior of native bees in Western Washington.
Schooner Series
Climate Adaptation and Justice
Thursday April 2, 2020 at 7pm, at the Blue Moon Tavern, 712 NE 45th St
Seattle, WA 98105. Postponed
Fall 2019
Graduate Student Seminar
Thursday, November 14th at 5pm in ATG 610.
The 2019 Graduate Climate Conference (GCC), which is held every year and hosted either by MIT or the University of Washington, provides a forum for graduate students to discuss what can be done and what’s at stake as graduate students studying climate. Greta Shum will give a summary of the conference and present questions posed by the community after attending the conference this year.
Aji John will be discussing his research on the use of in-situ instrumentation and remote sensing to study the long-term impacts of climate change at Mt. Rainier.
Schooner Series
Hitting Home – Climate Change Impacts in the PNW
Tuesday December 3rd, 2019 at 7pm, at the Flying Bike Cooperative Brewery, 8570 Greenwood Ave N, Seattle, WA 98103. This venue is family and pet friendly.
While we should all care about the global impacts of climate change, it is difficult not to want to focus in on impacts that we can expect to see in our own backyard. This upcoming Climate Science on Tap: Schooner Series event hits close to home in examining projected climate changes in the Pacific Northwest. We will examine implications to our hydrological cycle with a changing snowpack. We will talk about stresses on our marine food web, particularly everyone’s favorites, salmon and orcas. We will also seriously consider the shrinking habitat for Cascadia’s ever elusive sasquatch. As always, we’re here to tackle big topics in pint-sized packages with fun, informative, conversation over a brew or two. We hope you join us!
Panel:
- Oriana Chegwidden, Civil and Environmental Engineering
- Megan Feddern, School of Aquatic and Fisheries Sciences
-
Katie Breen, School of Environmental and Forestry Sciences
2018-2019
Spring 2019
April 16th from 5-6 PM in ATG 610. Robbie Emmet on “Developing a monitoring framework for wolverines in the Cascades.” Robbie is a graduate student in the Quantitative Ecology and Resource Management (QERM) program and a research fellow at the Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center.
Winter 2019
Tuesday March 12, 2019 in ATG 610 at 5 PM. Jon Witt, a chemical engineer in the Clean Energy Institute, will be giving a presentation about development of carbon neutral fuel through co-electrolysis.
(this was cancelled due to weather) The first GSS of winter quarter is TUESDAY, 2/12 from 5-6 PM in ATG 610. Three graduate fellows from the Department of the Interior Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center at UW will present their current research.
Contact Kelly Carpenter kcarp@uw.edu
Fall 2018
TUESDAY, 10/9 from 5-6 PM in ATG 406 the PCC will host this year’s first Graduate Student Seminar (GSS). Mark your calendars and come on by to meet your new and old PCC buddies!
This year we welcome six new members to the PCC Graduate Student Steering Committee (P-GraSC)! On Tuesday’s GSS, we’ll hear from our new P-GraSC members to introduce them and get a flavor for the breadth of research they participate in. They will each make a 5 min. presentation to leave plenty of time for questions and transitions (refreshments!).
2017-2018
Spring 2018
GSS will take place from 5:30-6:30 PM on the following dates:
- 4/17 Hillary Scannell & Leah Johnson on the NYT marine policy contest
- 5/1 Rebeca de Buen Kalman on how transportation policy affects bike usage in Mexico City
- 5/15 Stephanie Rushley on her interdisciplinary PCC fellowship work relating corals and the MJO
- 5/29 Ben Miller on hydropower in the Mekong River system
ATG 610 is reserved for each date, although we might update that to add a little geographic diversity.
2016-2017
The last Graduate Student Seminar (GSS) of the 2016-2017 academic year was held on May 23. Some of our new PCC Graduate Student Steering Committee (P-GraSC) members gave one slide, five-minute presentations on their research/interests over pizza, snacks, and beverages.
Grant Williamson from the Molecular Engineering Department spoke about new battery technologies under research at the Clean Energy Institute and why we should care about batteries in general.
“Postcards from the Arctic” with Oceanography grad student, Sarah Dewey, and Coast Guard Lieutenant, Caroline Bell, sharing their stories about research in the Arctic.
Jake Steinberg (Oceanography) on the prevalence and importance of oceanic subsurface-intensified eddies. How do we observe these eddies and understand their role in the advection of heat and salt (among other interesting tracers).
Michael Diamond (Atmospheric Sciences)
“Small particles, large impact: Why do we care about aerosols?”
Hillary Scannell (Oceanography)
“Marine Heatwaves: emerging climate phenomena not just in your own backyard”