A summit at Oxford University’s Blavatnik School of Government will explore and map how innovation can help the world to net zero, faster.
articles
Diamonds and Rust at the Earth’s Core-Mantle Boundary
Scientists in ASU’s School of Earth and Space Exploration assist in discovery of potential 'diamond factory' that may have existed at the core-mantle boundary for billions of years.
Living in Timber Cities Could Avoid Emissions – Without Using Farmland for Wood Production
Housing a growing population in homes made out of wood instead of conventional steel and concrete could avoid more than 100 billion tons of emissions of the greenhouse gas CO2 until 2100, a new study by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research shows.
Changes to Florida’s Climate Threaten Oyster Reefs, USF Researchers Warn
With temperatures rising globally, cold weather extremes and freezes in Florida are diminishing – an indicator that Florida’s climate is shifting from subtropical to tropical.
Study Will Sharpen Understanding of Precipitation’s Influence on Aerosols in the Atmosphere
A new $620,000, three-year grant from the U.S. Department of Energy will enable a University of Kansas atmospheric scientist to research how aerosols, clouds and precipitation interact over ocean waters, with the goal of producing more accurate Earth System Models.
Exposure to Past Temperature Variability May Help Forests Cope With Climate Change
A new study out today in the first issue of Environmental Research: Ecology, published by IOP Publishing, assessed effects of past and current climate variability on global forest productivity.