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July 30, 2007
Seto reports urban land use change has been and will continue to be one of the biggest human impacts on the terrestrial environment
In a study recently released in the Journal of Climate, Center fellow Karen Seto finds first empirical evidence for an 'urban precipitation deficit'. Her team analyzed Landsat satellite images to determine the explosive growth in the Pearl River Delta in China, and then compared that to monthly climate data from 16 meteorological stations.
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June 27, 2007
CESP co-director Stephen Schneider lauds Google and PG&E's effort to combine forces to bring more efficient hybrids onto the road
The highly unusual test takes the hybrid a step further by using extra batteries to hold energy made and distributed by a power company. "These guys have clout with hundreds of millions of young and middle-aged people," says Schneider, adding that what was necessary to jump-start a new type of car was a combination of reliability, affordability and "cool".
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June 20, 2007
BP Foundation awards $7.5 million to Stanford for research on energy markets
The BP Foundation has awarded a five-year, $7.5 million grant to Stanford University's Program on Energy and Sustainable Development to support research on modern energy markets. The foundation is funded by BP, one of the world's largest energy companies. "BP's support has allowed our program to study the world's most pressing energy problems, such as global warming, energy poverty, and the prospects for the world oil market," said program director and Stanford law Professor David Victor. "In addition to BP Foundation support, we learn from BP's experience as an energy company because they operate in all the markets where we do research--such as in China and India."
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June 15, 2007
CESP biologist Terry Root says new study showing the ability of some Artic plants to respond to climate change 'great news'
Many Arctic plant species have readily adjusted to big climate changes, repeatedly recolonizing the rugged islands of the remote Svalbard archipelago off Norway's coast through 20,000 years of warm and cool spells since the frigid peak of the last ice age, researchers report in today's issue of the journal Science.
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June 5, 2007
CESP Co-Director Stephen Schneider honored with Clean Air Award
CESP Co-Director Stephen Schneider was one of nine local organizations, businesses and individuals honored last week with a 2007 Clean Air Award in recognition of his exemplary leadership in fighting global warming.
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May 8, 2007
CESP Co-Director Stephen Schneider gives annual Henry W. Kendall Lecture at MIT
The talk, titled "Uncertainties in Climate Forecasts: Causes, Magnitudes, and Policy Implications," highlighted the pioneering legacy of Henry Kendall.
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May 3, 2007
Climate change a threat to Indonesian agriculture, PNAS study says
A new study published May 8th in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) finds that Indonesian rice agriculture is greatly affected by short-run climate variability, and could be significantly harmed by long-run climate change. Indonesia is the fourth most populous country in the world, one of the world's largest producers and consumers of rice, and is characterized by a population of rural poor who depend on rice agriculture for their livelihood.
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April 4, 2007
Report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change presents "key global risks" that threaten humanity
The report is designed to identify the dangers that the failure to curb emissions of carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases present for the planet. CESP senior fellows and co-author of the report Terry Root and Stephen Schneider comment on the need for politicians and planners to know the worst-case scenarios and to begin taking action now.The encouraging message is that the problem can be fixed and scientists and politicians must work together to make that happen.
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Root outlines her concerns about global warming in an interview with CNET
CESP senior fellow Terry Root is a co-author of a report on climate change, "Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability," to be discussed this week at an international conference in Belgium.
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March 27, 2007
CESP co-director and climate scientist Stephen Schneider testifies before Congress on the subject of climate change risks and control strategies
On February 28, 2007, Stephen Schneider testified before the Committee on Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives. Attached is a transcript of his testimony.
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"We are pushing our natural system at a much faster rate than we understand," cautions Schneider
Nina Leopold Bradley, daughter of famed ecologist Aldo Leopold, has been documenting the planet's warming effect on Wisconsin. Schneider told an audience in Madison last fall that policy-makers have responded to global warming faster where the signs are more visible.
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March 21, 2007
Scientists discuss the importance of ethics in creating a culture of sustainability
Addressing climate-change impacts is often more about ethics than economics, and universities have an especially important role to play in helping humans ensure the planet's sustainability, according to biological sciences professors Stephen Schneider and Paul Ehrlich, who participated in a Feb. 19 symposium, "The Science and Ethics of a Culture of Sustainability," at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in San Francisco.
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March 20, 2007
FSE scholars urge the need for both research and education as Berkeley's new Energy Biosciences Institute moves forward.
The institute's primary goal will be facilitating the production of biofuels on a scale large enough to result in a net drop of carbon emission linked to vehicles. "The magnitude of the scientific and environmental challenges involved in raising (crop) yields and at the same time protecting the environment is underestimated," cautions FSE scholar Kenneth Cassman. Chris Somerville adds that socioeconomic research should be a substantial portion of that effort as well.
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March 19, 2007
'We are truly standing at the edge of mass extinction of species,' say CESP senior fellow Terry Root
Root is a co-author of an international scientific report by the authoritative Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to be presented next month at a meeting in Belgium. The draft document is the second of a series of four being issued this year focusing on the effect of global warming.
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Global warming in the last 20 years has led to a decline in crop yields resultlng in an annual loss of $5 billion, says FSE scholars Lobell and Field
David Lobell and Chris Field released a report in the Environmental Research Letters journal on March 16, 2007 announcing that rising global temperatures are causing the loss of roughly 40 million tons of corn, wheat and barley production each year. Although yields in general are climbing due to technological improvements, higher temperatures have held yield potential down. "A key moving forward is how well cropping systems can adapt to a warmer world," Lobell said. "Investments in this area could potentially save billions of dollars and millions of lives."
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February 23, 2007
Global impact of livestock production focus of recent event
The harmful environmental effects of livestock production are becoming increasingly serious at all levels-local, regional, national and global-and urgently need to be addressed, according to researchers from Stanford, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and other organizations.
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February 16, 2007
Goulder named to vice-chair Calif. environmental advisory committee
FSI senior fellow Lawrence Goulder has been named the vice-chair of the California Environmental Protection Agency's Market Advisory Committee. The 13-member committee, consisting of climate policy experts from around the world, is charged with developing a market-based plan for meeting the greenhouse gas emissions targets established under the California climate-change bill passed last September.
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February 13, 2007
'We need a new conservation movement, one that makes conservation economically attractive,' says Natural Capital Project director and CESP senior fellow Gretchen Daily
The just-launched Natural Capital Project is a collaboration of Stanford's Woods Institute for the Environment, the Nature Conservancy, and the World Wildlife Fun. The project will measure the carbon, hydrology and biodiversity benefits of various international ecosystems-putting a price tag on all of them.
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February 7, 2007
Nature: Is the global carbon market working?
The Clean Development Mechanism can be viewed not only as a market, but also as a subsidy and a political mechanism. Michael Wara argues that it has been most effective, so far, in achieving its political goals.
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February 5, 2007
Political ''ownership'' by involving government officials in processing the latest IPCC report an important step, says climate scientist Stephen Schneider
"Ownership across governments radically altered how these reports have been received," said Dr. Schneider. "This is no longer something imposed on them. They were part of it. They may not like what it says, but they own it. That process took 10 years, but it built a lot of trust."
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January 11, 2007
Climate scientist Stephen Schneider describes chilling consequences of a nuclear war
Beyond the immediate devastation of a large-scale nuclear war, a growing number of scientists are concerned about the aftermath of "nuclear winter," which could result in famine for billions of people across the globe.
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The Goldman Interschool Honors Program in Environmental Science, Technology, and Policy applications for the upcoming year are due April 20, 2007
The Goldman Interschool Honors Program brings together students from the Schools of Humanities and Sciences, Engineering, and Earth Sciences to participate in a small group seminar. If you want to graduate with an honors certification in Environmental Science, Technology, and Policy, pick up an application in room E401, Encina Hall-East or email Roz Naylor at roz@stanford.edu. All class years welcome to inquire.
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January 2, 2007
CESP research fellow Jon Christensen featured in "The Great Wilderness Compromise" aired January 5, 2007
PBS "NOW" heads out West to examine a controversial effort to find common ground on wilderness protection in the reddest state in America: Idaho. Correspondent Jon Christensen follows Rep. Mike Simpson, the Republican sponsor of a compromise wilderness bill, from the halls of Congress to the peaks of the White Cloud Mountains.
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December 4, 2006
Energy-saving opportunities identified in the recently released McKinsey report are a 'start smart' approach to global warming policy, says climate expert Stephen Schneider
"The economy needs time to adjust, the politics takes time to gel and people need to understand and get use to change to really support the big moves," explains Stephen Schneider, in a recent New York Times article. The growth rate of worldwide energy consumption could be cut by more than half over the next 15 years through more aggressive energy-efficiency efforts by households and industry, according to a study by the McKinsey Global Institute.
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December 1, 2006
Global impact of hydroelectric dams may be significant
Nature magazine included findings from PESD researcher, Danny Cullenward's work analyzing emissions of greenhouse gases from hydroelectric dams in the tropics. He estimates that dams release between 95 million and 122 million tonnes of methane per year. His work has also been featured in a recent report by Berkeley-based International Rivers Network and in the San Francisco Chronicle.
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