It studies a range of possible
future socioeconomic changes and technological innovations.
Not exact matches
In predicting how climate will affect irrigated crop yields in the
future, the researchers also consider factors such as population and economic growth, as well as competing demands for water from various
socioeconomic sectors, which are themselves projected to
change as the climate warms.
Congratulations to Dr. Katherine Calvin who received a 2015 Ronald L. Brodzinski Early Career Exceptional Achievement award for leadership in research that integrates environmental and climate
change research and their
socioeconomic implications for the
future.
With technological advancements continuing to
change our world and daily lives, the need for more focus on the
socioeconomic, political, and environmental trends youth will face in the
future is a critical part of the discourse on the learning that matters most.
Agriculture has been able to adapt to recent
changes in climate; however, increased innovation will be needed to ensure the rate of adaptation of agriculture and the associated
socioeconomic system can keep pace with
future climate
change.
Opensource model to examine how
future water demand will evolve in response to
socioeconomic change and how water availability will
change in response to climate.
Future climate change impacts will depend on past and future socioeconomic development, which influences emissions of heat - trapping gases, the exposure and vulnerability of society and ecosystems, and societal capacity to re
Future climate
change impacts will depend on past and
future socioeconomic development, which influences emissions of heat - trapping gases, the exposure and vulnerability of society and ecosystems, and societal capacity to re
future socioeconomic development, which influences emissions of heat - trapping gases, the exposure and vulnerability of society and ecosystems, and societal capacity to respond.
Lorenzoni, I. and Hulme, M. (2009) Believing is seeing: laypeople ‟ s views of
future socioeconomic and climate
change in England and Italy.
Policy decisions made during this window are likely to result in
changes to Earth's climate system measured in millennia rather than human lifespans, with associated
socioeconomic and ecological impacts that will exacerbate the risks and damages to society and ecosystems that are projected for the twenty - first century and propagate into the
future for many thousands of years.
His current research includes a global assessment of the sustainability of
future food production under
socioeconomic and climate
change, and water scarcity.