The Climate Resilience for Technical Professionals Workshop Series blends knowledge from the technical and social sciences (including systems engineering, environmental philosophy, climate psychology, and deep ecology). The sessions will provide participants with practical tools and frameworks for embedding climate action into their daily actions and decisions.
The workshops are designed to be independently attended. Certificates of completion are available for participants who complete at least 4 / 5 workshops. This workshop series can be counted towards engineering continuing education hours.
Workshops:
Purchase series tickets ($50 – 150 Sliding Scale)
Purchase individual tickets ($30 / Individual Workshop)
Email nick@climateparadigm.ca if pricing is a barrier
The content of the series is targeted at STEM professionals, climate allied professions, and leadership of corporate organizations seeking to:
Nick Couture is a registered professional engineer and founder of Climate Paradigm Collaborative. He holds a collective 7 years of experience distributed across systems engineering, climate change facilitation, grief work, product management, sales engineering, marine data collection, industrial construction, wind energy design, and transformational coaching. He holds certificates in climate psychology, truth and reconciliation action, and business strategies for a better world. Additionally, he has been a life-long student of environmental philosophy, regenerative economics, social enterprise development, earth listening, world religion / spirituality, and improvisational creative practice (dance, music, comedy).
“I am a white cisgender male settler living on and working from the unceded traditional territories of the lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) speaking peoples, also known as the Songhees and Esquimalt First Nations. I grew up in Winnipeg Manitoba on Treaty One Territory and went through post secondary education under a westernized system at the University of Manitoba. I acknowledge potential gaps in my understanding of systems change work as a result of the highly privileged position that I come from and am actively learning, growing, and porous to feedback related to my work and how it is being carried out.”
Overview
Maximizing the meaningful social-environmental impact of our work requires we must first hold a baseline understanding of what the climate crisis currently entails. This workshop will provide an overview of:
Workshop Aim
Overview
Great thinkers throughout recorded history have allowed nature and natural processes to inform their work, design, and thought. It is only in modern times that we have fallen away from this process of listening in favor of anthropocentric world view. Participants will learn techniques for integrating the practice of “earth listening” into their work, reconnecting with the natural world and bolstering their familiar rational decision making process’.
Workshop Aim
Overview
Technical professionals face an ever-increasing number of complex decisions where economics, social impact, and environmental considerations clash. The answers to these dilemmic decisions are often grey and time consuming to answer unless properly equipped. This workshop explores the process of making these micro-decisions and integrating environmental considerations into everyday engineering practices.
Workshop Aim
Overview
Traditionally, carbon emissions are used as the primary, unified method for measuring a corporations climate impact. Many technical professionals do not have the time or academic background to confidently identify alternative metrics to measure environmental / social impact. This workshop will teach participants methods for going beyond traditional sustainability metrics to create a deeper sense of purpose in their work and measure of their project success.
Workshop Aim
Overview
This workshop explores this ethical responsibility held by technical professionals to develop internal systems of accountability related to responding to the climate crisis. We will also discuss the nuanced process of balancing economic pressures with long-term environmental and societal impacts. The workshop provides practical insights into integrating environmental ethics into everyday professional practices, and extends principles from the engineering code of ethics to other STEM professions.
Workshop Aim
Doors will close 10-minutes after the session starts in respect of the container that will be held unless advanced notice of a late arrival is given.
Please bring any tokens that are personal to you to place in the center of the room for the purpose of invoking a sense of connection to nature (i.e. rocks, acorns, leaves, trinkets)
There is potential to un-earth challenging emotions during these sessions. We ask that participants show up with an open heart/mind holding compassion and curiosity for the personal expressions of others as paramount. We also ask that participants manage their own anxiety / stress / sense of overwhelm and take space from the group if needed. There are plenty of comfortable spaces in the common areas of The Dock to re-ground.