Not exact matches
Click here for the white paper, cited in this
article, which contains our
research on how regenerative organic agriculture can reverse
climate change.
However, the initiators asserted that the aim of the journal was to publish
articles about patterns recognized in the full spectrum of physical disciplines rather than to focus
on climate -
research - related topics.
«Arctic populations are often identified as being highly vulnerable people, but that's not necessarily what the
research shows,» says James Ford of McGill University's Geography Department and the lead author of an
article on the subject that was recently published in Nature
Climate Change.
Chris de Freitas as editor of
Climate Research greenlighted the deeply flawed Soon and Baliunas paper
on MWP, after Baliunas had acted as handpicked reviewer of a de Freitas
article in the Bulletin of the Canadian Society of Petroleum Engineers a year earlier.]
Summary: This
article provides information
on a
research project involving 7th graders at 1000 California middle schools asking the students to report
on various aspects of school
climate.
Summary: This
article reports
on a
research brief — the product of a year of work by 28 academic researchers who study issues like student motivation, school
climate, and social - emotional learning.
Summary: This
article reports
on the results of an analysis of 76 school
climate research studies which found that there was a strong correlation between positive school
climate and student achievement.
Article by Penny Rafferty in Berlin / / Jul. 21, 2017 Dehlia Hannah's work traverses both the world of image - making and scientific discourse: she started her
research in
climate change and art around ten years ago and has repeatedly asked the question... [read
on]
The piece caught my eye because, in sifting through New York Times archives a few years ago while
researching my book
on the changing Arctic, I found what I believe is our first substantial newspaper coverage of
research pointing to the prospect that humans could substantially warm the
climate — a 1956
article on Plass's work by Waldemar Kaempffert.
(I'd first heard of of Norgaard's
research while reporting my 2007
article on behavior and
climate risk.)
On the other hand, the same issue had a Pielke Jr.
article in it, in which he once more trots out the claim that because virtually the whole mainstream
climate science community (which Pielke refers to loosely as «pro Kyoto» lambasted the flawed Baliunas et al Climate Research article, we all must be letting our political convictions over-ride our scientific jud
climate science community (which Pielke refers to loosely as «pro Kyoto» lambasted the flawed Baliunas et al
Climate Research article, we all must be letting our political convictions over-ride our scientific jud
Climate Research article, we all must be letting our political convictions over-ride our scientific judgement.
This
article (http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/10/30/business/web.1030energy.php) notes spending
on climate research has falling from $ 7.7 B in 1979 to $ 3B today.
Martin P. Hoerling, a federal
research meteorologist specializing in
climate dynamics, faced a lot of pushback after he criticized some assertions made in an Op - Ed
article on climate change by James E. Hansen of NASA.
http://humbabe.arc.nasa.gov/~fenton/ Note that this global warming as been studied by only one
research team and presented in one
article (to be compared to the thousands of
articles studying
climate trends
on earth), based
on partial satellite data, and there is a serious debate now amongst the planetologists community to determine if this is a persistent trend or if it will stop in a few years.
For more, read my 2014
article on how the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change left out this energy
research gap in its 2014 synthesis report.
I myself have spent many, many hours
researching and writing online
articles seeking to disseminate correct information
on the topic of
climate change — a behavioral demonstration of how much I do in fact agree that science education is very important.
My
article for Sunday Review also touches
on the building body of Arctic
climate and ice
research that draws strong lines between human - driven global warming and the retreat of ice that's allowed Arctic shipping and tourism to surge.
[March 3 Update: Peter Frumhoff of the Union of Concerned Scientists put it this way in a new Times
article on trust in
climate research: «We need to acknowledge the errors and help turn attention from what's happening in the blogosphere to what's happening in the atmosphere.»]
«ExxonMobil — which recorded $ 10.5 billion in third quarter profits this year — has an obligation and a responsibility to the global community to refrain from lending their support, financial and otherwise, to bogus, non substantiated
articles and publications
on climate change that serve only to cloud the important global debate of rigorous peer - reviewed
research and writings,» Senator Snowe said.
My
research focuses
on interactions among
climate, the ocean and global carbon cycles, and marine ecosystems, and I have published more than 200 peer - reviewed scientific journal
articles and book chapters
on these and related subjects.
The conclusion in relation to the «Hockey Stick» is expressed in the Scientific American
article on the
research: «Novel Analysis Confirms
Climate «Hockey Stick» Graph».
A striking 80 percent of the
climate - denying blogs that were analyzed relied
on one blog in particular written by Susan Crockford — a source that the authors said «had neither conducted any original
research nor published any
articles in the peer - reviewed literature
on polar bears.»
One
article had nothing to do with
climate change, another called for strict CO2 regulations, and a third advocated
research on geo - engineering, the manipulation of the environment to offset the rise in CO2.
• Polar Bear Junk Science — In a 2007 published «junk science»
article on polar bears and Arctic
climate impacts, the author acknowledged receiving
research funding from ExxonMobil, American Petroleum Institute and the Charles G. Koch foundation.
This guidance document provides access to
articles, videos and various other resources that would assist indigenous peoples, local communities, policy makers and other stakeholders in
researching on climate change adaptation and mitigation.
This
article is part of the Special Issue
on «A Framework for the Development of New Socioeconomic Scenarios for
Climate Change
Research» edited by Nebojsa Nakicenovic, Robert Lempert, and Anthony Janetos.
Bjorn Lomborg wrote an
article in The Wall Street Journal titled «An Overheated
Climate Alarm» which claims that cold temperatures are more deadly than heat, following the publication of the US Global Change Research Program's (US GCRP) overview of the impact of climate change on public healt
Climate Alarm» which claims that cold temperatures are more deadly than heat, following the publication of the US Global Change
Research Program's (US GCRP) overview of the impact of
climate change on public healt
climate change
on public health: [14]
We have three excellent participants joining this discussion: Bart van den Hurk of KNMI in The Netherlands who is actively involved in the KNMI scenario's, Jason Evans from the University of Newcastle, Australia, who is coordinator of Coordinated Regional
Climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) and Roger Pielke Sr. who through his research articles and his weblog Climate Science is well known for his outspoken views on climate mod
Climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) and Roger Pielke Sr. who through his
research articles and his weblog
Climate Science is well known for his outspoken views on climate mod
Climate Science is well known for his outspoken views
on climate mod
climate modelling.
I was working from an
article that suggested the US alone had spent $ 80 - 100 billion
on climate related
research.
An
article yesterday by Bob Ward, Policy and Communications Director at the Grantham
Research Institute
on Climate Change and the Environment, dug deeper into the Met Office's Hadcrut4 dataset and suggests Rose manipulated it to create a false graph.
The
research team surveyed the abstracts of over 12,000 scientific
articles published between 1991 and 2011
on the subjects of «global
climate change» or «global warming» to see to what extent they endorsed or [continue reading...]
Perhaps a coincidence, the apparent popularity of
climate change
articles (i.e., number of published
articles and reported effect sizes) plummeted shortly after Climategate, when the world media focused its scrutiny
on this field of
research, and perhaps, popularity in this field waned (Fig. 1).
On June 13, 2010, Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew
Research Center, also wrote to The New York Times concerning the same Krosnick
article, saying, «Regarding poll findings about
climate change, Mr. Krosnick posits that his question is more legitimate than others.
-- Southern Ocean Iron Fertilization Experiment (SOFeX)-- The basics of the most recent expedition — Penny Chisholm's site, which lists many professional papers — Paul Falkowski's
article (PDF document)-- DOE
article:
Climate Change Scenarios Compel Studies of Ocean Carbon Storage — Government site for carbon sequestration
research — An earlier piece Williams wrote
on sequestration — Will Ocean Fertilization To Remove Carbon Dioxide from the Atmosphere Work?
(1) «
On the Mail on Sunday article on Karl et al., 2015» by Peter Thorne at the blog of the Irish Climate Analysis and Research Units hosted by the Department of Geography at Maynooth Universit
On the Mail
on Sunday article on Karl et al., 2015» by Peter Thorne at the blog of the Irish Climate Analysis and Research Units hosted by the Department of Geography at Maynooth Universit
on Sunday
article on Karl et al., 2015» by Peter Thorne at the blog of the Irish Climate Analysis and Research Units hosted by the Department of Geography at Maynooth Universit
on Karl et al., 2015» by Peter Thorne at the blog of the Irish
Climate Analysis and
Research Units hosted by the Department of Geography at Maynooth University.
Dr. Spencer has grown frustrated with the fact that most of his
climate scientist colleagues conduct
research under the premise that the recent warming is anthropogenic, and in an
article on his blog, has thrown down the gauntlet:
Climate science may be a good subject for people trying to reform the scientific publishing business (with non-free printed pares in a day where authors more and more let their
articles freely available
on the net, citation index conditioning partly a career of professor who can advance by
researching, or more of more quickly by managing PhD teams, or by media interest, or consulting (political or private) business.
If you look into the science, you begin to see patterns of behavior that are strikingly similar to the what is being discussed in
climate science: manipulation of
research, improperly conducted studies, political machinations and influence, and so
on, to the point that I read in a recent
article in the Altlantic that a very highly regarded researcher in this field claims that up to 90 % of these studies are either flawed or totally inaccurate.
The 430 - page report was coauthored and edited by three
climate science researchers: Craig D. Idso, Ph.D., editor of the online magazine CO2 Science and author of several books and scholarly
articles on the effects of carbon dioxide
on plant and animal life; Robert M. Carter, Ph.D., a marine geologist and
research professor at James Cook University in Queensland, Australia; and S. Fred Singer, Ph.D., a distinguished atmospheric physicist and first director of the U.S. Weather Satellite Service.
The group of scientists − led by Carlos Nobre, a member of the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) and co-ordinator of the Centre for Weather Forecasting and
Climate Studies at Brazil's Space
Research Institute (INPE) − set out their vision in an
article published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.
Peiser has long opposed mainstream science's conclusions about anthropogenic global warming; in 2005 Peiser said he had data which refuted an
article published in Science Magazine, claiming 100 % of peer - reviewed
research papers
on climate change agreed with the scientific consensus of global warming.
Chris de Freitas as editor of
Climate Research greenlighted the deeply flawed Soon and Baliunas paper
on MWP, after Baliunas had acted as handpicked reviewer of a de Freitas
article in the Bulletin of the Canadian Society of Petroleum Engineers a year earlier.]
Recently, two science
articles based
on the latest
research belies the notion, held by global warming alarmist proponents, that
climate change is only a result of modern human CO2 emissions.
An
article critical of Ebell's talk and of BBC, posted at the Grantham
Research Institute
on Climate Change and the Environment at Imperial College London, describes how «Many of Mr Ebell's claims are demonstrably false.
As she explained in a recent
article for
Climate Home, Thomas's research shows small island states are hit increasingly hard by tropical storms but don't have robust data to measure the influence of climate change on specific
Climate Home, Thomas's
research shows small island states are hit increasingly hard by tropical storms but don't have robust data to measure the influence of
climate change on specific
climate change
on specific events.
A selection of
articles on climate topics based
on scientific
research and studies.
This newsletter contains
articles on the following: 2016 as a record - warm year for the province, recent PCIC
research on Fraser River Basin
climate impacts, recent Data Portal upgrades, Director Francis Zwiers's keynote at the Wildland Fire Canada Meeting and recognition as a highly - cited researcher, a staff profile on Megan Kirchmeier - Young, our Pacific Climate Seminar Series, PCIC's contributions to the AGU Fall Meeting and Northwest Climate Conference, the most recent Science Brief, staff changes and recent papers by PCIC staff and affi
climate impacts, recent Data Portal upgrades, Director Francis Zwiers's keynote at the Wildland Fire Canada Meeting and recognition as a highly - cited researcher, a staff profile
on Megan Kirchmeier - Young, our Pacific
Climate Seminar Series, PCIC's contributions to the AGU Fall Meeting and Northwest Climate Conference, the most recent Science Brief, staff changes and recent papers by PCIC staff and affi
Climate Seminar Series, PCIC's contributions to the AGU Fall Meeting and Northwest
Climate Conference, the most recent Science Brief, staff changes and recent papers by PCIC staff and affi
Climate Conference, the most recent Science Brief, staff changes and recent papers by PCIC staff and affiliates.
Nicholas Stern, Chair of the Grantham
Research Institute
on Climate Change and the Environment at the LSE, in a recent article in the Guardian (February14, 2014), comments on his 2006 review on the economics of climate chang
Climate Change and the Environment at the LSE, in a recent
article in the Guardian (February14, 2014), comments
on his 2006 review
on the economics of
climate chang
climate change thus:
In addition to the following
research articles raising questions
on linking CO2 increases to water vapor increases, there is the unresolved question of how clouds will react and influence
climate as CO2 increases.
A tip
on the hat to Grist for pointing out an
article from Environmental
Research Letters from Ken Caldeira and Nathan Myhrvold,
on, essentially, how quickly transitioning to clean energy can combat
climate change, the inertia inherent in the
climate system, and whether anything short of a wholesale rapid transition away from fossil fuels will do the trick.