Tyndall Climate Advisory takes its name from two sources: the Tyndall Gorge area of Rocky Mountain National Park, a place that is deeply special to me, and John Tyndall, the 19th century physicist who first identified carbon dioxide as a heat-trapping greenhouse gas. Every trip into the gorge reconnects me with why this work matters; the glacier bearing his name is visibly retreating, a stark and personal reminder of the world we are changing.
I founded Tyndall Climate Advisory to help organizations understand, quantify, and act on climate risk. My practice focuses on translating complex climate science into information for improved climate risk decisions, adaptation strategies, and resilience plans grounded in rigorous analysis.
I am an applied mathematician specializing in climate risk modelling with experience spanning consulting, earth system research, and data science. At Guidehouse I led asset-level climate risk assessments for infrastructure clients, built extreme value analysis workflows in Python, and advised utilities on adaptation strategies. Prior to that, I developed accelerated numerical algorithms for global ocean and land model components of CMIP participating Earth System Models at the University of Oxford, where I also earned a Distinction in my masters studies in Mathematical Modelling and Scientific Computing.
I am also an Olympic gold medalist and former professional swimmer, an experience that instilled a deep appreciation for hard work, persistence, and performing under pressure. I now bring that same rigor to every engagement.
Problems in climate risk are complex and rarely solved alone. If you're interested in partnering, collaborating, or simply exchanging ideas, don't hesitate to get in touch.