Energy News  
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Climate change: Scientists tap nature, space and society
by Staff Writers
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Feb 13, 2019

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Three scientists share their research from the natural, physical, and social sciences on novel responses to climate change.

Thomas Crowther will identify long-disappeared forests available for restoration across the world. He will describe how data from thousands of soil samples collected by local scientists in 1.2 million locations reveal the world's most abundant population of soil organisms in arctic and sub-arctic regions and the most dominant populations of plants and animals in tropical regions. Our understanding of current and future biogeochemical cycles is essential for the prediction of climate change.

Laura Duncanson will point to two recent NASA laser missions - the ICESat-2 satellite and the Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) - and their contributions to mapping global forest biomass, to guide forest management programs and inform climate mitigation plans. Duncanson will show how data from forests located both in boreal, tropical and temperate areas can improve carbon measurements.

Matto Mildenberger will explain how perceived experiences with climate change in the United States can be linked to political shifts in Congress, culture and society. He will demonstrate how public opinion shapes political incentives to mitigate climate change.

Research Report: Understanding Carbon Cycle Feedbacks to Predict Climate Change


Related Links
ETH Zurich
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Climate change risks US bases, fuels social disorder: top admiral
Washington (AFP) Feb 12, 2019
Climate change and a deteriorating environment are likely to fuel social disorder and could threaten some US military bases, a top admiral said Tuesday. Admiral Philip Davidson, who heads the US military's vast Indo-Pacific Command, told lawmakers he concurred with a recent assessment from the US intelligence community that listed climate change as a global threat. "The immediate manifestation is the number of ecological disaster events that are happening," Davidson told the Senate Armed Servic ... read more

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