Ted Shepherd


Theodore Gordon Shepherd FRS is the Grantham Professor of Climate Science at the University of Reading.

Education and career

Shepherd was educated at the University of Toronto where he was awarded a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics and Physics in 1979. He completed his postgraduate education at Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he was awarded a PhD in 1982 for research supervised by Jule Gregory Charney and on turbulence in Rossby waves.
Following his PhD, Shepherd was appointed a postdoctoral research fellow at St Catharine's College, Cambridge supervised by in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge. After 24 years working at the University of Toronto in Canada he moved back to the United Kingdom in 2012, funded by a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award.

Research

Shepherd is a dynamical meteorologist whose interests range from theoretical geophysical fluid dynamics to climate modelling and data analysis, with a focus on atmospheric circulation. This span from fundamentals to applications has been a hallmark of his research.
Shepherd worked at the University of Toronto from 1988-2012, where he made pioneering contributions to Hamiltonian fluid mechanics while initiating and leading the Canadian national climate modelling effort focussed on ozone-climate coupling. He made several pivotal contributions to the understanding of the role of climate variability and change in interpreting the observed ozone record and in predicting future ozone recovery. Since moving to the University of Reading in 2012, he has highlighted the important role of atmospheric circulation in climate change, which has implications for regional adaptation and societal risk.
He has held leadership roles in scientific assessments of both climate Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and stratospheric ozone /United Nations Environment Programme ) and in the World Climate Research Programme.

Awards and honours

Shepherd was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2016, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2007, the American Geophysical Union in 2010, and the American Meteorological Society in 2005.