We brought together young risk management professionals and early career climate scientists to build professional networks and increase awareness and understanding at both ends of the decision-making spectrum.
Karen Pearce
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Satellite data is increasingly supporting carbon cycle monitoring, but there are still some limitations on what the data can tell us.
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Managing climate risk to 2030 means accounting for both climate change and natural climate variability.
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As strange as it sounds, global warming could actually be increasing the odds of some types of cold extremes in some places.
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A project to digitise old tide records will enable analysis of how extreme sea levels along Australia’s coastline have changed over time – and you can be involved!
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Hub researchers are using a combination of observations and modelling to better understand the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events.
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Benefits from the Hub’s regional climate change science and work to make it more accessible and useful for stakeholders are extending into the Pacific.
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Water is the most precious resource needed for plants to grow, and our research suggests that vegetation is becoming much better at using it in a world in which carbon dioxide levels continue to rise.
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Financial risk and liability: why understanding climate change is important for corporate Australia
From both a regulatory and market perspective, corporate Australia can no longer ignore climate risk.
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Contributions to sea-level rise have increased by half since 1993, largely because of Greenland’s ice
Greenland’s contribution to sea-level rise is increasing due to both increased surface melting and flow of ice into the ocean.
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Hub research is providing climate change information that can inform management and policy decisions in Northern Australia.
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Jack Knowles from the Hub’s Stakeholder Advisory Group suggests that collaboration between researchers and the agriculture sector is essential to ensure the real-world utility of climate information and services.
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Australia’s national climate model is an important tool for helping us to understand our past, current and future climate––but what exactly is ACCESS?
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A new fire weather dataset will inform our understanding of the climate changes that are already occurring, and those still to come.
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Droughts and flooding rains already more likely as climate change plays havoc with Pacific weather
Global warming has already increased the risk of major disruptions to Pacific rainfall and will continue to do so over coming decades, even if global warming during the 21st century is restricted to 2℃.