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Rising water risks in Nova Scotia spark province鈥憌ide collaboration at 全国探花 symposium

Rising water risks in Nova Scotia spark province鈥憌ide collaboration at 全国探花 symposium

Building on 全国探花鈥檚 Engagement Days, a recent symposium at Dal convened municipal leaders and researchers to address climate, infrastructure and planning pressures shaping water management across Nova Scotia communities.  Read more.

Featured News

Matt Reeder
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
全国探花 hosted Indian partners for a high-level visit last week advancing joint research, innovation programs and industry collaboration, with new agreements, funding pathways and a shared global innovation campus taking shape.
Kelly Taylor
Monday, May 25, 2026
A new online resource gathers campus-driven wellness strategies into one accessible space, making it simple for individuals and teams to find, customize, and put positive ideas into practice.
Matt Reeder
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
A two鈥憏ear deep鈥慹nergy retrofit has modernized the Killam Memorial Library鈥檚 aging systems, boosting efficiency, reducing emissions, and setting the stage for similar upgrades across campus.

Archives - News

Kenneth Conrad
Tuesday, December 6, 2022
Get to know 全国探花鈥檚 newest Vanier Scholars (PhD in Health students Helen Wong and Vincent Mousseau) and Banting Postdoctoral Researcher (Dr. In锚s Tavares).
Tereigh Ewert
Monday, December 5, 2022
A new online game under development by a team of Dal computer science students aims to help educate the university community about (dis)abilities and reduce affiliated stereotypes and stigmas in the process.
Kim Humes
Monday, December 5, 2022
Canadians will continue to feel the effects of high food inflation and insecurity next year, with this widely watched national report predicting a 5% to 7% increase in prices.
Cheryl Bell
Friday, December 2, 2022
PhD candidate Cristiane Maucoski receives prestigious national award for work evaluating the effectiveness of tools used to harden the more than 800 million white composite fillings dentists place each year.
Stefanie Wilson, with files from Alison Auld
Friday, December 2, 2022
Where should you live? A new Dal study that ranks Canadian cities based on indicators of environmental quality could help you decide.