NCE Funding Announcement

CMN bilingual logo

On April 16th, 2019, Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan announced that the Canadian Mountain Network (CMN) will receive $18.3 million in funding over five years (2019–2024) through the Networks of Centres of Excellence program.

With this new funding, CMN will act as a catalyst for improving Canada’s ability to identify and respond to changing conditions in its vast mountainous regions. Collaboration will be a key component of this initiative, with the aim of identifying critical research gaps and opportunities that link Canada’s inter-jurisdictional mountainous regions.

Comprising over a quarter of Canada’s landmass, mountainous regions are essential providers of ecosystem services, such as water, maintenance of biodiversity, recreation opportunities, and cultural and spiritual connection. However, local and global drivers of change are affecting these regions and downstream communities in ways that we do not currently have the capacity to observe, study, forecast, adapt to, or mitigate.

As a Network of Centres of Excellence, hosted by the University of Alberta, CMN’s vision is that all Canadians benefit from state-of-the-art research, tools, and training that embody multiple ways of knowing. The goal is for decision making and action to enhance the sustainability and well-being of our mountain places and peoples. Read a summary of CMN’s application to the NCE program here. The Network’s Leadership Team and Board of Directors are currently working to translate the application into a strategic plan and look forward to sharing more with CMN’s supporters and partners in the months ahead.

co research directors
Co-Research Directors Stan Boutin & Norma Kassi

A key focus of the Network’s approach and activities is to support reconciliation through research by creating opportunities for collaboration. CMN’s research agenda will support projects based on partnerships across disciplines and sectors, including projects led by Indigenous communities and based on Indigenous research methodologies.

The Network is supported by dozens of diverse organizations across the country, including Indigenous organizations, municipalities, provincial and territorial governments, businesses, post-secondary institutions and not-for-profits.

In addition to its research program, the Network will support the development of a comprehensive mountain observations program, an innovative training program for the next generation of mountain researchers and professionals, and an effective knowledge mobilization program to support evidence-based decision making based on multiple ways of knowing.

The Network’s Leadership Team would like to acknowledge the committed support and effort of many individuals, organizations, and communities across Canada since 2016 to make this initiative a reality. In particular, we recognize the Faculty of Science at the University of Alberta for its leadership in supporting the development of the application, as well as its ongoing contributions. We also recognize the generous contributions of CMN’s other Sustaining Partners, which include the University of Calgary and the Government of Yukon.


The Canadian Mountain Network is breaking new ground to build a national research network that brings together Indigenous and Western ways of knowing and doing to support the sustainability and prosperity of our vital mountain regions.

Dr. Joe Dragon, CMN Board Chair and Deputy Minister of Environment and Natural Resources, Government of the Northwest Territories

For the first time through the Canadian Mountain Network, Indigenous communities and their representatives will have leadership roles in not only in a network’s research program but also in its management and governance.

Norma Kassi, CMN co-Research Director and Director of Indigenous Collaboration at the Arctic Institute for Community-Based Research

With this new funding, the Canadian Mountain Network will act as a catalyst for improving Canada’s ability to identify and respond to changing conditions in its vast mountainous regions.

Stan Boutin, CMN Co-Research Director and Professor of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta

The U of A has developed an international reputation for mountain research over the past few decades. We’re very proud to host the Canadian Mountain Network at the U of A, and we’re excited to build on that expertise as a Centre of Excellence.

David Turpin, President of the University of Alberta


#MountainsMatter

  • Mountains cover 22% of the earth’s land surface and 25% of Canada’s land surface. Mountain ranges in Canada cover over 1.5 million km2, seven times the area of the European Alps.
  • Mountains host 25% of terrestrial biodiversity and 28% of earth’s forests.
  • Mountains are the water towers of the world, sourcing water for approximately half of humanity. In North America, they collect two-thirds of the continental snowpack that feeds many of our river systems.

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