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Jimmy Thomson

Jimmy Thomson

Managing Editor | Victoria
About Jimmy Thomson

Jimmy Thomson is Canada's National Observer's managing editor. He started out as a scientist — researching sea slug brains, of all things — and a polar guide before finding his way to journalism.

His work on climate, the environment, and Indigenous issues has been recognized with Jack Webster Award, Canadian Association of Journalists awards, National Magazine Awards, Digital Publishing Awards, Edward R. Murrow awards, and many others. He's been published across Canada and worldwide in outlets like The Guardian, The Washington Post, The Globe and Mail, The Narwhal, and The Walrus.

He played a very tiny part in the discovery of Sir John Franklin's ship, the Erebus, in the High Arctic, for which he was a co-recipient of the Erebus Medal, and his work has been translated into Mandarin, German, French, Russian, Norwegian, Inuktitut, Chipewyan, Slavey, Gwich'in, and Italian (and, once, a nationally syndicated comic strip).

7 Articles

Local climate solutions will rise as national leaders retreat

Thankfully, local governments, First Nations, and civil society are picking up some of the slack where they can. Toronto is fighting tooth and nail to keep its bike lanes in place against a hostile Ford government. Vancouver, after a brief flip-flop, stuck to its ban against natural gas heating in new residential buildings. First Nations are developing clean energy projects across the country, getting off diesel generators to reduce risk, clean the air and avoid emissions at the same time.
  • Profile photo of Jimmy Thomson