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  • First Coast-To-Coast Land Motion Map of Scotland Derived from Satellite Radar Images

    The first country-wide map of relative land motion has been created by a team at the University of Nottingham.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Cities Can Cut Greenhouse Gas Emissions Far Beyond Their Urban Borders

    Greenhouse gas emissions caused by urban households’ purchases of goods and services from beyond city limits are much bigger than previously thought. These upstream emissions may occur anywhere in the world and are roughly equal in size to the total emissions originating from a city’s own territory, a new study shows. This is not bad news but in fact offers local policy-makers more leverage to tackle climate change, the authors argue in view of the UN climate summit COP23 that just started. They calculated the first internationally comparable greenhouse gas footprints for four cities from developed and developing countries: Berlin, New York, Mexico City, and Delhi. Contrary to common beliefs, not consumer goods like computers or sneakers that people buy are most relevant, but housing and transport – sectors that cities can substantially govern.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Biological Consequences of Climate Change on Epidemics May Be Scale-dependent

    Conventional thinking holds that current climate warming will increase the prevalence and transmission of disease. 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Why the Post-Paris Climate Challenge Is Even Harder Than We Thought

    Climate negotiators gathering in Germany this week are still flush with the success of the Paris Agreement two years ago. But as they begin assembling a rule book for ensuring that the national pledges made in Paris are fulfilled, there comes a hard dose of reality. Those pledges, which constrain greenhouse gas emissions from now to 2030, will only deliver a third of the cuts needed to put the world on track to keep warming below the promised 2 degrees Celsius.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA's GPM Radar Spots Tornado Spawning Thunderstorms in Ohio Valley

    Severe weather that rolled through the Ohio Valley on Nov. 5 was analyzed by NASA's Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM satellite. GPM provided forecasters at the National Weather Service with rain rates and cloud heights that showed where strongest storms were located.  

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Federal climate science report for U.S. released

    U.S. Global Change Research Program’s (USGCRP) Climate Science Special Report (CSSR), which serves as Volume I of the Fourth National Climate Assessment (NCA4), describes current trends in the climate globally and for the U.S., and projects trends in temperature, precipitation, sea-level rise and Arctic sea ice for the remainder of this century.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA Satellite Tracks Ozone Pollution by Monitoring Its Key Ingredients

    Ozone pollution near Earth's surface is one of the main ingredients of summertime smog. It is also not directly measurable from space due to the abundance of ozone higher in the atmosphere, which obscures measurements of surface ozone. New NASA-funded research has devised a way to use satellite measurements of the precursor gases that contribute to ozone formation to differentiate among three different sets of conditions that lead to its production. These observations may also assist air quality managers in assessing the most effective approaches to emission reduction programs that will improve air quality.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Swapping Where Crops are Grown Could Feed an Extra 825 Million People

    Redrawing the global map of crop distribution on existing farmland could help meet growing demand for food and biofuels in coming decades, while significantly reducing water stress in agricultural areas, according to a new study. Published today in Nature Geoscience, the study is the first to attempt to address both food production needs and resource sustainability simultaneously and at a global scale.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Breaking the Chain: Catalyzing a Green Future for Chemistry

    The fight against climate change is a call-to-arms for industry. We currently rely on fossil fuels, a major source of the greenhouse gas CO2, not only for energy but also to create chemicals for manufacturing. To ween our economies off this dependency, we must find a new source of “green” raw materials so that factories and laboratories can run without producing and emitting CO2.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Protecting 'High Carbon' Rainforests Also Protects Threatened Wildlife

    Conservation efforts focused on protecting forests using carbon-based policies also benefit mammal diversity, new research at Kent has found.

    >> Read the Full Article

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