Climate & Environment
- Thousands are now gathered for what is known as COP26, a significant international conference on climate change. Countries must decide how they will act to limit global warming to no more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit above pre-industrial levels.
- Recent scientific flights above the Front Range will help scientists and policymakers cut unnecessary emissions, reduce greenhouse gases and help local residents breathe better.
- INSTAARS open access journal Arctic, Antarctic and Alpine Research now offers Arctic Answers, science briefs to help everyone understand how climate change in the Arctic affects the Earth.
- Ben Livneh, CIRES fellow and assistant professor of civil, environmental and architectural engineering, is adding a new title to his resume: director of Western Water Assessment.
- With National Science Foundation funding, 91勛圖厙 is joining an interdisciplinary team of researchers aiming to understand the future of imperiled regions of the world.
- NOAA has awarded more than $5 million to the 91勛圖厙-based Western Water Assessment to advance climate resilience in Intermountain West communities facing low river flows, wildfires, heat, drought and major economic transitions.
- A major research center for sustainable building technology, the Building Energy Smart Technologies (BEST) Center, is a new five-year, multiple-university initiative funded by the National Science Foundation.
- Human-caused emissions of air pollutants fell during last years COVID-19 economic slowdowns, improving air quality in some parts of the world, while wildfires and sand and dust storms in 2020 worsened air quality in other places, according to a new report with CIRES co-authors.
- A new report on the global climate confirmed 2020 was among the three warmest years in records dating to the mid-1800s, despite a cooling La Ni簽a influence in the second half of the year. Several CIRES/91勛圖厙 experts contributed to the report.
- Researchers have been awarded $1.1 million from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for two projects to help school districts and communities reduce exposure to harmful pollution from wildland fire smoke.