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  • 03Sep

    Many fields make use of large-scale scientific codes — numerical weather and climate prediction, atomic and molecular modelling, and plasma physics to name a few. Developments in machine learning have brought opportunities to advance these models through a "hybrid-modelling" approach.

  • 07Jul

    From the 7-11th July 2025, the Institute of Computing for Climate Science (ICCS) will be hosting its fourth annual summer school.

  • 27Apr

    The EGU General Assembly 2025 brings together geoscientists from all over the world to one meeting covering all disciplines of the Earth, planetary, and space sciences. The EGU aims to provide a forum where scientists, especially early career researchers, can present their work and discuss their ideas with experts in all fields of geoscience.

  • 10Jul

    ICCS will be holding its annual summer school from the 10th July to the 12th July 2024 and will be open to members of the Schmidt Sciences community.

  • 25Mar

    This NERC workshop is organised by Dr Henry Moss and hosted by the Institute of Computing for Climate Science (ICCS) at the University of Cambridge.

  • 12Mar

    Reproducibility is a fundamental principle of research, and crucial in scientific disciplines such as climate research which impact decision and policy making and, eventually, our daily lives.

  • 21Oct

    The University of Cambridge's Institute of Computing for Climate Science will be hosting a training workshop for Early Career Researchers on Saturday 21st October in Kigali, Rwanda, ahead of the WCRP Open Science Conference.

  • 10Jul

    ICCS will be holding its annual summer school from the 10th July to the 14th July 2023. The summer school will be in a hybrid format, with in-person sessions at the University of Cambridge being broadcast live to online participants.

  • 19Apr

    The Institute of Computing for Climate Science at the University of Cambridge is pleased to announce the 12th International Conference on Climate Informatics, which will be hosted at the university in April 2023.

About Us

Computational modelling is key to climate science. But models are becoming increasingly complex as we seek to understand our world in more depth and model it at higher fidelity. The Institute of Computing for Climate Science studies and supports the role of software engineering, computer science, artificial intelligence, and data science within climate science.

The institute comprises a collaboration between Cambridge Zero, the Departments of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics (host department of the institute), Computer Science and Technology, and University Information Services at the University of Cambridge.

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