04 novembre 2025
We propose a new paradigm, as toxicology currently lacks the proper perspective. From the 1950s to the 1970s, at least one-third of all toxicological testing in the United States, including for chemicals and drugs, was misleading scientists, and this worldwide issue persists today. Moreover, petroleum-based waste and heavy metals have been discovered in pesticide and plasticizer formulations. These contaminations have now reached all forms of life. Widespread exposure to chemical mixtures promotes health and environmental risks. We discovered that pesticides have never undergone long-term testing on mammals in their full commercial formulations by regulatory authorities or the pesticide industry; instead, only their declared active ingredients have been assessed, contrary to environmental law recommendations. The ingredients of these formulations are not fully disclosed, yet the formulations are in general at least 1000 times more toxic at low environmentally relevant doses than the active ingredients alone u
active,
change,
chemical,
chemicals,
commercial,
conditions,
contaminations,
environmental,
europe,
food,
from,
health,
industry,
long,
metals,
perspective,
pesticide,
pesticides,
petroleum,
regulatory,
risks,
sciences,
scientists,
supply,
toxic,
warning,
waste,
world,
pollutions,
polluants,
toxicologie,
règlementations,
Europe 29 octobre 2025
22 of the planet’s 34 vital signs are at record levels, with many of them continuing to trend sharply in the wrong direction. This is the message of the sixth issue of the annual “State of the climate” report. The report was prepared by an international coalition with contribution from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and led by Oregon State University scientists. Published today in BioScience, it cites global data from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in proposing “high-impact” strategies.
2025,
change,
cites,
climate,
focusclimat,
coalition,
contribution,
data,
earth,
from,
future,
global,
impact,
institute,
international,
ipcc,
oregon,
planet,
record,
report,
research,
science,
scientists,
state,
university,
vital,
plusde2,
chezjosette 17 octobre 2025
Collapse has historically benefited the 99%. […] That’s the amazing conclusion of Luke Kemp, author of Goliath’s Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse. Luke is a research associate at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge, and has spent the past five years studying the collapse of civilisations throughout history. He joins me to explain his research, detailing the difference between complex, collective civilisations and what he calls “Goliaths”, massive centralising forces by which a small group of individuals extract wealth from the rest through domination and the threat of violence. Today, he says, we live in a global Goliath.
centre,
civilisations,
collapse,
collective,
domination,
forces,
from,
future,
global,
group,
history,
massive,
research,
risk,
study,
university,
violence,
years,
focuscollaps,
collapsologie,
effondrement 01 octobre 2025
Four key parts of the Earth’s climate system are destabilising, according to a new study with contributions from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). Researchers analysed the interconnections of four major tipping elements: the Greenland ice sheet, the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), the Amazon rainforest and the South American monsoon system. All four show signs of diminished resilience, raising the risk of abrupt and potentially irreversible changes.
amazon,
amoc,
changes,
circulation,
climate,
focusclimat,
contributions,
earth,
greenland,
impact,
institute,
interconnections,
irreversible,
rainforest,
research,
resilience,
risk,
study,
system,
tipping 24 août 2025
The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is an important tipping element in the climate system. There is a large uncertainty whether the AMOC will start to collapse during the century under future climate change, as this requires long climate model simulations which are not always available. Here, we analyze targeted climate model simulations done with the Community Earth System Model (CESM) with the aim to develop a physics-based indicator for the onset of an AMOC tipping event. This indicator is diagnosed from the surface buoyancy fluxes over the North Atlantic Ocean and is performing successfully under quasi-equilibrium freshwater forcing, freshwater pulse forcing, climate change scenarios, and for different climate models. An analysis consisting of 25 different climate models shows that the AMOC could begin to collapse by 2063 (from 2026 to 2095, to percentiles) under an intermediate emission scenario (SSP2-4.5), or by 2055 (from 2023 to 2076, to percentiles) under a high-end emission scenar
2023,
2025,
2026,
always,
amoc,
changes,
circulation,
climate,
focusclimat,
collapse,
collapses,
earth,
european,
event,
forcing,
freshwater,
future,
impacts,
long,
model,
ocean,
oceans,
online,
quasi,
research,
scenario,
scenarios,
simulations,
start,
surface,
system,
tipping,
uncertainty,
focusclimat 21 août 2025
This article examines the technocentric bias that characterizes climate mitigation literature, focusing on the reports of the IPCC's Working Group III. This bias stems from structural features of the scientific field that prioritizes innovation, leading to the overrepresentation of technological solutions in climate research. Funding mechanisms further reinforce this tendency by incentivizing collaboration with industrial R&D, creating a self-reinforcing loop in which scientific authority and industrial interests converge. The IPCC's institutional positioning—as a policy-relevant yet politically cautious body—amplifies this dynamic by favoring allegedly “cost-effective” technological pathways that lack practical feasibility.
change,
climate,
focusclimat,
collaboration,
expertise,
history,
innovation,
ipcc,
mitigation,
policy,
research,
scientific,
solutions,
structural,
tech,
changement,
climatique,
atténuation,
biais,
technologique,
focusrisquetech,
GIEC,
technologies,
capture,
stockages,
carbone,
co2,
objectifs,
zéro,
émission,
nette,
2050-2070,
suffisance,
redistribution,
décroissance,
sectorielle,
changement,
structurel,
luap,
atraduire 05 août 2025
There is rising concern that several parts of the Earth system may abruptly transition to alternative stable states in response to anthropogenic climate and land-use change. Key candidates of such tipping elements include the Greenland Ice Sheet, the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, the South American monsoon system and the Amazon rainforest. Owing to the complex dynamics and feedbacks between them via oceanic and atmospheric coupling, the levels of anthropogenic forcing at which transitions to alternative states can be expected remain uncertain. Here we demonstrate how such interactions can generate spurious signals and potentially mask genuine signs of destabilization. We further review and present observation-based evidence that the stability of these four tipping elements has declined in recent decades, suggesting that they have moved towards their critical thresholds, which may be crossed within the range of unmitigated anthropogenic warming. Our results call for better monitoring of these ti
04 août 2025
The White House has instructed NASA employees to terminate two major, climate change-focused satellite missions. As NPR reports, Trump officials reached out to the space agency to draw up plans for terminating the two missions, called the Orbiting Carbon Observatories. They've been collecting widely-used data, providing both oil and gas companies and farmers with detailed information about the distribution of carbon dioxide and how it can affect crop health.
20 juillet 2025
In an analysis of the best available Earth systems models, Northeastern researchers found that by the turn of the next century, 850 million people will feel the effects of declining runoff from the world's major rivers.
19 juillet 2025
The Environmental Protection Agency said on Friday that it would eliminate its scientific research arm and begin firing hundreds of chemists, biologists, toxicologists and other scientists, after denying for months that it intended to do so. The move underscores how the Trump administration is forging ahead with efforts to slash the federal work force and dismantle federal agencies after the Supreme Court allowed these plans to proceed while legal challenges unfold. Government scientists have been particular targets of the administration’s large-scale layoffs.
07 juillet 2025
Research in Chile suggests climate crisis makes eruptions more likely and explosive, and warns of Antarctica risk
11 juin 2025
Recent simulations using the Community Earth System Model (CESM) indicate that a tipping event of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) would cause Europe to cool by several degrees. This AMOC tipping event was found under constant pre-industrial greenhouse gas forcing, while global warming likely limits this AMOC-induced cooling response. Here, we quantify the European temperature responses under different AMOC regimes and climate change scenarios. A strongly reduced AMOC state and intermediate global warming (C, Representative Concentration Pathway 4.5) has a profound cooling effect on Northwestern Europe with more intense cold extremes. The largest temperature responses are found during the winter months and these responses are strongly influenced by the North Atlantic sea-ice extent. Enhanced North Atlantic storm track activity under an AMOC collapse results in substantially larger day-to-day temperature fluctuations. We conclude that the (far) future European temperatures are dependent o
2025,
amoc,
cause,
change,
circulation,
climate,
focusclimat,
collapse,
concentration,
earth,
europe,
european,
event,
fluctuations,
forcing,
future,
global,
greenhouse,
intense,
limits,
model,
online,
research,
scenario,
scenarios,
simulations,
state,
storm,
system,
temperature,
temperatures,
tipping,
warming,
winter,
océans 20 mai 2025
I’m used to environmentalists and futurists writing about The Limits to Growth. I’m less used to seeing investment writers mention research that’s linked to The Limits of Growth. But that’s what Joachim Klement did in his daily newsletter recently. Of course, anyone who writes about Limits of Growth has to do all the usual disclaimers first. This is because the combination of the words “limits” and “growth” in the title produced a lot of critical responses, on a range from straight-up hatchet jobs which misrepresented the book, to people who didn’t appear to understand the systems dynamics model that sat behind it.
collapse,
course,
growth,
investment,
limits,
model,
next,
people,
research,
right,
systems,
focuscollaps,
effondrement,
Meadows,
limite,
croissance,
dynamique,
système,
luap 30 avril 2025
2023 set a number of alarming new records. The global mean temperature also rose to nearly 1.5 degrees Celsius above the preindustrial level, another record.A team led by the Alfred Wegener Institute puts forward a possible explanation for the rise in global mean temperature: our planet has become less reflective because certain types of clouds have declined. The work is published in the journal Science.
19 avril 2025
Microplastics have been found for the first time in human ovary follicular fluid, raising a new round of questions about the ubiquitous and toxic substances’ potential impact on women’s fertility. The new peer-reviewed research published in Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety checked for microplastics in the follicular fluid of 18 women undergoing assisted reproductive treatment at a fertility clinic in Salerno, Italy, and detected them in 14.
environmental,
fertility,
health,
impact,
microplastics,
research,
substances,
toxic,
focussanté,
pollution,
microplastiques 31 mars 2025
Recent projections suggest that large geographical areas will soon experience heat and humidity exceeding limits for human thermoregulation. The survivability limits modeled in that research were based on laboratory studies suggesting that humans cannot effectively thermoregulate in wet bulb temperatures (Twb) above 26 to 31 °C, values considerably lower than the widely publicized theoretical threshold of 35 °C. The newly proposed empirical limits were derived from the Twb corresponding to the core temperature inflection point in participants exposed to stepped increases in air temperature or relative humidity in a climate-controlled chamber. Despite the increasing use of these thermal-step protocols, their validity has not been established. We used a humidity-step protocol to estimate the Twb threshold for core temperature inflection in 12 volunteers.
bulb,
climate,
focusclimat,
exceeding,
heat,
limits,
point,
relative,
research,
temperature,
temperatures,
chaleur,
thermorégulation,
focussanté,
focusclimat 05 mars 2025
The ocean ecosystem is a vital component of the global carbon cycle, storing enough carbon to keep atmospheric CO2 considerably lower than it would otherwise be. However, this conception is based on simple models, neglecting the coupled land-ocean feedback. Using an interactive Earth system model, we show that the role ocean biology plays in controlling atmospheric CO2 is more complex than previously thought. Atmospheric CO2 in a new equilibrium state after the biological pump is shut down increases by more than 50% (163 ppm), lower than expected as approximately half the carbon lost from the ocean is adsorbed by the land. The abiotic ocean is less capable of taking up anthropogenic carbon due to the warmer climate, an absent biological surface pCO2 deficit and a higher Revelle factor. Prioritizing research on and preserving marine ecosystem functioning would be crucial to mitigate climate change and the risks associated with it.
carbon,
change,
climate,
focusclimat,
communications,
cycle,
earth,
from,
future,
global,
interactive,
land,
marine,
model,
nature,
ocean,
research,
risks,
state,
surface,
system,
vital,
océans 25 février 2025
Amid President Donald Trump’s attacks on government scientists and science funding, researchers are arranging rallies to “Stand Up for Science” in Washington, D.C., and nationwide on March 7
23 février 2025
As of February 22, over twenty Stand Up for Science protests are scheduled for March 7 throughout the United States. The protests are being organized by fellow scientists who are concerned about the Trump administration’s feelings and actions towards science (see Robles-Gil, 2025 in Science), includ
2017,
2025,
actions,
administration,
fair,
from,
future,
government,
jobs,
media,
protest,
reporting,
research,
science,
scientific,
scientists,
source,
stand,
trump,
wikipedia,
world,
activisme,
standupforscience2025 21 février 2025
US government stripping funds from domestic and overseas research amid warnings for health and public safety
10 février 2025
En réponse au lancement de Deep Research par OpenAI, Hugging Face développe Open Deep Research, un agent IA open source créé en seulement 24 heures.
27 janvier 2025
Previous health impact assessments of temperature-related mortality in Europe indicated that the mortality burden attributable to cold is much larger than for heat. Questions remain as to whether climate change can result in a net decrease in temperature-related mortality. In this study, we estimated how climate change could affect future heat-related and cold-related mortality in 854 European urban areas, under several climate, demographic and adaptation scenarios. We showed that, with no adaptation to heat, the increase in heat-related deaths consistently exceeds any decrease in cold-related deaths across all considered scenarios in Europe. Under the lowest mitigation and adaptation scenario (SSP3-7.0), we estimate a net death burden due to climate change increasing by 49.9% and cumulating 2,345,410 (95% confidence interval = 327,603 to 4,775,853) climate change-related deaths between 2015 and 2099. This net effect would remain positive even under high adaptation scenarios, whereby a risk attenuation of 50%
adaptation,
change,
cities,
climate,
focusclimat,
european,
future,
heat,
nature,
scenarios,
chaleur,
température,
europemortalité,
villes 15 janvier 2025
Emerging infectious diseases, biodiversity loss, and anthropogenic environmental change are interconnected crises with massive social and ecological costs. In this Review, we discuss how pathogens and parasites are responding to global change, and the implications for pandemic prevention and biodiversity conservation. Ecological and evolutionary principles help to explain why both pandemics and wildlife die-offs are becoming more common; why land-use change and biodiversity loss are often followed by an increase in zoonotic and vector-borne diseases; and why some species, such as bats, host so many emerging pathogens. To prevent the next pandemic, scientists should focus on monitoring and limiting the spread of a handful of high-risk viruses, especially at key interfaces such as farms and live-animal markets. But to address the much broader set of infectious disease risks associated with the Anthropocene, decision-makers will need to develop comprehensive strategies that include pathogen surveillance across s
12 décembre 2024
Experts warn that mirror bacteria, constructed from mirror images of molecules found in nature, could put humans, animals and plants at risk of lethal infections
,
call,
earth,
research,
risk,
science,
scientists,
bactéries,
miroirs,
vie,
focussanté 04 décembre 2024
In March 2022, a New York City-sized ice shelf collapsed in East Antarctica, long thought to be relatively stable against rapid change. The Conger-Glenzer ice shelf collapsed following decades of ocean-induced thinning, allowing its long-stabilizing features to transform into destabilizing ones.
12 octobre 2024
We, the undersigned, are scientists working in the field of climate research and feel it is urgent to draw the attention of the Nordic Council of Ministers to the serious risk of a major ocean circulation change in the Atlantic. A string of scientific studies in the past few years suggests that this risk has so far been greatly underestimated. Such an ocean circulation change would have devastating and irreversible impacts especially for Nordic countries, but also for other parts of the world.
amoc,
change,
circulation,
climate,
focusclimat,
impacts,
irreversible,
ocean,
research,
risk,
scientific,
scientists,
world,
Amoc,
gulfstrean,
courant,
méridienne,
retournement,
atlantique,
circulation,
méridienne,
retournement 02 août 2024
Several studies in recent years have suggested the crucial system — the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC — could be on course for collapse, weakened by warmer ocean temperatures and disrupted saltiness caused by human-induced climate change. But the new research, which is being peer-reviewed and hasn’t yet been published in a journal, uses a state-of-the-art model to estimate when it could collapse, suggesting a shutdown could happen between 2037 and 2064.
01 août 2024
Under current emission trajectories, temporarily overshooting the Paris global warming limit of 1.5 °C is a distinct possibility. Permanently exceeding this limit would substantially increase the probability of triggering climate tipping elements. Here, we investigate the tipping risks associated with several policy-relevant future emission scenarios, using a stylised Earth system model of four interconnected climate tipping elements.
climate,
focusclimat,
communications,
emissions,
greenhouse,
limit,
nature,
risks,
tipping,
limites,
planétaires,
moinsde2 08 mai 2024
Huge patches of forest in Tasmania have rapidly turned brown over recent months, with many trees dying after a dry summer. As climate change causes hotter and drier weather, can we expect more tree deaths in the future?
22 avril 2024
Over the past 50 years, humans have extracted the Earth’s groundwater stocks at a steep rate, largely to fuel global agro-economic development. Given society’s growing reliance on groundwater, we explore ‘peak water limits’ to investigate whether, when and where humanity might reach peak groundwater extraction. Using an integrated global model of the coupled human–Earth system, we simulate groundwater withdrawals across 235 water basins under 900 future scenarios of global change over the twenty-first century. Here we find that global non-renewable groundwater withdrawals exhibit a distinct peak-and-decline signature, comparable to historical observations of other depletable resources (for example, minerals), in nearly all (98%) scenarios, peaking on average at 625 km3 yr−1 around mid-century, followed by a decline through 2100. The peak and decline occur in about one-third (82) of basins, including 21 that may have already peaked, exposing about half (44%) of the global population to groundwater stress. Most
17 avril 2024
Global projections of macroeconomic climate-change damages typically consider impacts from average annual and national temperatures over long time horizons1–6. Here we use recent empirical findings from more than 1,600 regions worldwide over the past 40 years to project sub-national damages from temperature and precipitation, including daily variability and extremes7,8. Using an empirical approach that provides a robust lower bound on the persistence of impacts on economic growth, we find that the world economy is committed to an income reduction of 19% within the next 26 years independent of future emission choices (relative to a baseline without climate impacts, likely range of 11–29% accounting for physical climate and empirical uncertainty). These damages already outweigh the mitigation costs required to limit global warming to 2 °C by sixfold over this near-term time frame and thereafter diverge strongly dependent on emission choices. Committed damages arise predominantly through changes in average tempe
04/17/2024 - Even if CO2 emissions were to be drastically cut down starting today, the world economy is already committed to an income reduction of 19 % until 2050 due to climate change, a new study published in “Nature” finds. These damages are six times larger than the mitigation costs needed to limit global warming to two degrees. Based on empirical data from more than 1,600 regions worldwide over the past 40 years, scientists at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) assessed future impacts of changing climatic conditions on economic growth and their persistence.
15 février 2024
Le débat sur les nouveaux OGM est biaisé par les lobbies qui défendent toute une série d’intérêts économiques. A la faveur de sa présidence européenne, la Belgique doit se positionner dans ce dossier en facilitant l’élaboration d’une politique européenne qui donne la priorité à l’équité, à l’autonomie des agriculteur.e.s, à la santé publique et à l’environnement.
18 octobre 2023
Daniel P. Aldrich (born 1974) is an academic in the fields of political science, public policy and Asian studies. He is currently full professor of political science and public policy at Northeastern University.[1] Aldrich has held several Fulbright fellowships, including a Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Applied Public Policy (Democratic Resilience) at Flinders University in Australia in 2023,[2] a Fulbright Specialist[3] in Trinidad-Tobago in 2018, a Fulbright research fellowship at the University of Tokyo's Economic's Department for the 2012–2013 academic year, and a IIE Fulbright Dissertation Fellowship in Tokyo in 2002–2003. His research, prompted in part by his own family's experience of Hurricane Katrina,[4] explores how communities around the world respond to and recover from disaster.
2018,
2023,
chair,
disaster,
economic,
from,
policy,
public,
research,
resilience,
science,
university,
wikipedia,
world 31 juillet 2023
L’Agenda 21 local de la commune de Saint-Gilles (Bruxelles, Belgique) est désormais remplacé par le Plan Climat Saint-gillois (PCSG) qui s’articule autour de trois axes: l’énergie, la mobilité et la nature. Ce Plan est complété par la présente étude qui effectue : 1) la synthèse des perspectives climatiques pour la Belgique et Bruxelles à l’horizon 2050-2100 pour les principaux aléas concernés par le changement climatique ; 2) l’analyse des risques et vulnérabilités du territoire de Saint-Gilles en lien avec le changement climatique et l’identification des inégalités environnementales corollaires.
14 juillet 2023
A 1972 MIT study predicted that rapid economic growth would lead to societal collapse in the mid 21st century. A new paper shows we’re unfortunately right on schedule.
06 juillet 2023
As the Arctic warms, shrinking glaciers are exposing bubbling groundwater springs which could provide an underestimated source of the potent greenhouse gas methane, finds new research published in Nature Geoscience. The study, led by researchers from the University of Cambridge and the University Center in Svalbard, Norway, identified large stocks of methane gas leaking from groundwater springs unveiled by melting glaciers.
04 juillet 2023
Simultaneous harvest failures across major crop-producing regions are a threat to global food security. Concurrent weather extremes driven by a strongly meandering jet stream could trigger such events, but so far this has not been quantified. Specifically, the ability of state-of-the art crop and climate models to adequately reproduce such high impact events is a crucial component for estimating risks to global food security. Here we find an increased likelihood of concurrent low yields during summers featuring meandering jets in observations and models. While climate models accurately simulate atmospheric patterns, associated surface weather anomalies and negative effects on crop responses are mostly underestimated in bias-adjusted simulations. Given the identified model biases, future assessments of regional and concurrent crop losses from meandering jet states remain highly uncertain. Our results suggest that model-blind spots for such high-impact but deeply-uncertain hazards have to be anticipated and acc
03 juillet 2023
This Research Plan was prepared in response to a requirement in the joint explanatory statement accompanying Division B of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022, directing the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), with support from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), to provide a research plan for “solar and other rapid climate interventions.”
22 juin 2023
We ran computer programs that simulate ecosystems 70,000 times and the results are very worrying.
07 avril 2023
Several nations plan to build new coal power plants, with China alone approving nearly 100 gigawatts. Each gigawatt is the equivalent of installing more than 3 million solar panels.
06 avril 2023
Seafloor landforms reveal that ice sheets can collapse at 600 metres per day.
07 février 2023
The new study shows that every increment of sea level rise will cover more than twice as much land as older models predicted, and marks another advance in providing more accurate models of rising seas
24 octobre 2022
The destruction of global forests slowed in 2021 but the vital climate goal of ending deforestation by 2030 will still be missed without urgent action, according to an assessment. The area razed in 2021 fell by 6.3% after progress in some countries, notably Indonesia. But almost 7m hectares were lost and the destruction of the most carbon- and biodiversity-rich tropical rainforests fell by only 3%. The CO2 emissions resulting from the lost trees were equivalent to the emissions of the entire European Union plus Japan.
27 septembre 2022
Tussen 1982 en 2020 is de periode van sneeuwbedekking in berggebieden wereldwijd met gemiddeld vijftien dagen afgenomen. Dat blijkt uit een nieuwe studie van het Zwitserse onderzoekscentrum Eurac Research.
21 septembre 2022
Op 22 augustus lag de marktprijs voor aardgas bij de Duitse gasnetbeheerder THB (Trading Hub Europe) meer dan 1000% hoger dan een jaar geleden. De meeste Duitsers krijgen van de regering Scholz te horen dat de schuld ligt bij Poetin en diens oorlog in Oekraïne. Maar dat is ver bezijden de waarheid. EU-politici en belangrijke financiële belangen gebruiken Rusland als dekmantel voor wat eigenlijk een energiecrisis van Duitse en Brusselse makelij is. De gevolgen zijn dan ook geen toeval.
01 juillet 2022
The federal effort could set the stage for more studies into the feasibility, benefits and risks of one of the more controversial means of combating climate change.
23 juin 2022
Conference: Doctorales 2022 de la Société Française des Sciences de l'Information et de la Communication (SFSIC)At: Dijon
21 juin 2022
Projected growth in rocket launches for space tourism, moon landings, and perhaps travel to According to new NOAA research published in the Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres, a 10-fold increase in hydrocarbon fueled launches, which is plausible within the next two decades based on recent trends in space traffic growth, would damage the ozone layer, and change atmospheric circulation patterns.
09 mai 2022
Scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego used an unprecedented technique to detect that levels of helium are rising in the atmosphere, resolving an issue that has lingered among atmospheric chemists for decades.
A liquified natural gas (LNG) crisis is brewing for European countries dealing with energy insecurity in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as demand will outstrip supply by the end of this year, Rystad Energy research shows. Although soaring demand has spurred the greatest rush of new LNG projects worldwide in more than a decade, construction timelines mean material relief is unlikely only after 2024. Global LNG demand is expected to hit 436 million tonnes in 2022, outpacing the available supply of just 410 million tonnes. A perfect winter storm may be forming for Europe as the continent seeks to limit Russian gas flows. The supply imbalance and high prices will set the scene for the most bullish environment for LNG projects in more than a decade, although supply from these projects will only arrive and provide relief from after 2024 The European Union’s REPowerEU plan has set an ambitious target to reduce dependence on Russian gas by 66% within this year – an aim that will clash with the EU’s goal of
energy,
supply,
crisis,
will,
european,
countries,
ukraine,
research,
construction,
material,
europe,
continent,
limit,
environment,
storage,
global,
2021,
reliance,
security,
gaz liquéfié énergie 28 avril 2022
Les exportations de combustibles fossiles ont rapporté à la Russie près de « 63 milliards d’euros au cours des deux premiers mois de la guerre en Ukraine », selon une étude publié ce 28 avril par le CREA (Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air)(1).
livraisons,
combustibles,
fossiles,
russie,
énergies,
exportations,
guerre,
ukraine,
étude,
publié,
centre,
research,
energy 22 avril 2022
Les derniers engagements de Pékin en matière de climat, ont déjà conduit à l'annulation de 15 projets de centrales électriques au charbon, financés à l'étranger par la Chine, mais certains chantiers "dans une zone grise" pourraient aboutir, anticipent des experts. Les 15 projets annulés représentaient l'équivalent de 12,8 gigawatts (GW) d'électricité, selon une étude publiée vendredi par le Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), un institut de recherche basé en Finlande.
centrales,
charbon,
projets,
zone,
grise,
énergies,
engagements,
climat,
électriques,
chine,
experts,
électricité,
étude,
centre,
research,
energy,
institut,
recherche,
finlande,
co2 focusclimat 20 avril 2022
The world may be facing a devastating “hidden” collapse in insect species due to the twin threats of climate change and habitat loss.
climate,
change,
global,
collapse,
insect,
farmland,
research,
world,
species,
habitat,
loss,
focusclimat focusbiodiversité yfc 06 avril 2022
La transition énergétique en Europe pourrait connaître « une petite accélération », en raison de l’invasion russe de l’Ukraine, selon une nouvelle analyse de l'Energy Transition Research de DNV publiée ce 6 avril(1).
transition,
énergétique,
européenne,
guerre,
ukraine,
énergies,
europe,
accélération,
russe,
analyse,
energy,
research,
russie transition 24 mars 2022
New data suggests forests help keep the Earth at least half of a degree cooler, protecting us from the effects of climate crisis
14 mars 2022
Depuis le début de l’invasion russe en Ukraine, la question de la dépendance de l’Europe au gaz, et plus généralement aux combustibles fossiles, a surgi dans les discussions publiques. Cette crise, ajoutée à l’urgence climatique, nous rappelle que notre système énergétique doit fortement se transformer. Mais aussi que la transition énergétique sera fortement dépendante des importations de métaux. Analyse de Greg de Temmerman, docteur en physique expérimentale et directeur général du think tank Zenon Research.
pétrole,
extrême,
dépendance,
énergétique,
russe,
ukraine,
combustibles,
fossiles,
publiques,
crise,
climatique,
système,
transition,
importations,
métaux,
analyse,
physique,
général,
research,
russie guerre 04 mars 2022
La guerre en Ukraine a remis la question de notre (in)dépendance énergétique dans beaucoup de discussions, notamment car l’Europe importe beaucoup de gaz et de pétrole de Russie (entre autres matières). La transition énergétique est une opportunité de faire fortement évoluer cette dépendance… Mais au risque d’en créer de nouvelles. Décryptage par Greg De Temmerman, physicien, chercheur associé aux Mines-ParisTech PSL et directeur général du think tank Zenon Research.
russe,
alternatives,
guerre,
ukraine,
remis,
notre,
dépendance,
énergétique,
pétrole,
russie,
matières,
transition,
risque,
décryptage,
mines,
général,
research 10 février 2022
To this day, the demand for metals has kept increasing. The energy transition necessary to meet climate objectives will add to that demand during the upcoming decades, for low-carbon energy technologies require larger metal quantities than their fossil-fuel based counterparts. This frequently raises concerns over the actual capacity of geological stocks to meet demand at scale, which we investigate in the present analysis.
27 janvier 2022
The world could lose half of its best coffee-growing land under a moderate climate change scenario. Brazil, which is the currently world’s largest coffee producer, will see its most suitable coffee-growing land decline by 79%.
24 janvier 2022
Over the weekend, physical climate scientist David Holland made it to his research base on the Thwaites Glacier — a vast, unstable and vital ice formation in Southern Antarctica that researchers have scrambled to understand.
care,
glacier,
canada,
national,
news,
climate,
david,
research,
base,
vital,
formation,
Thwaites focusclimat 18 janvier 2022
There has been a 50-fold increase in the production of chemicals since 1950. This is projected to triple again by 2050
13 janvier 2022
Le glyphosate fait encore parler de lui. Le pesticide le plus utilisé dans le monde, et particulièrement en France, est au centre d’une nouvelle recherche. L’étude publiée mercredi dans la revue Environmental Science and Pollution Research et menée sur 6 848 personnes partout en France métropolitaine et à la Réunion est sans équivoque : la quasi-totalité des urines analysées sont contaminées au glyphosate.
glyphosate,
étude,
présence,
français,
pesticide,
monde,
france,
centre,
nouvelle,
recherche,
environmental,
science,
pollution,
research,
personnes,
urines,
focussanté,
agriculture 12 janvier 2022
Berkeley Earth, a California-based non-profit research organization, has been preparing independent analyses of global mean temperature changes since 2013. The following is our report on global mean temperature during 2021.
20 décembre 2021
The accelerating melting of the Himalayan glaciers threatens the water supply of millions of people in Asia, new research warns.
19 décembre 2021
Une étude récente portant sur la formation des nuages de glace au-dessus de l’océan Austral a mis en lumière la relation complexe qui lie la couverture nuageuse aux aérosols marins. Les résultats publiés dans la revue Geophysical Research Letters le 15 novembre dernier permettent notamment de comprendre pourquoi ceux-ci surviennent à des températures anormalement élevées dans cette région du monde.
océan,
nuages,
glace,
températures,
élevées,
étude,
formation,
lumière,
relation,
couverture,
aérosols,
marins,
research,
novembre,
comprendre,
région,
monde,
Austral 09 décembre 2021
New research sees two-thirds of mollusc types only found living by hydrothermal vents added to IUCN’s red list of endangered species
06 décembre 2021
Le secteur de l’armement a bien résisté au choc économique provoqué par la pandémie en 2020 : alors que l’économie mondiale a reculé de 3,1%, les ventes d’armes ont, elles, augmenté de 1,3% en termes réels. C’est ce que montrent les nouvelles données publiées par le Sipri (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute).
fabricants,
secteur,
économique,
pandémie,
2020,
mondiale,
nouvelles,
données,
stockholm,
international,
research,
institute,
armes armements 10 novembre 2021
Five times in the last 500m years, more than three-fourths of marine animal species perished in mass extinctions. Each of these events is associated with a major disruption of Earth’s carbon cycle. How such catastrophes occur remains mysterious. But recent research increasingly points to the possibility that the Earth system – that is, life and the environment – may experience a cascade of disruptions when stressed beyond a tipping point.
earth,
extinction,
disruption,
carbon,
research,
points,
cascade,
tipping,
point,
mass,
focusclimat focuscollaps 19 octobre 2021
The scientific consensus that humans are altering the climate has passed 99.9%, according to research that strengthens the case for global action at the Cop26 summit in Glasgow.
12 octobre 2021
Si la planète se réchauffe d'un demi-degré de plus, ce sont 200 millions de citadins supplémentaires qui seront ainsi régulièrement affectés par des inondations et rendus plus vulnérables lors des tempêtes, ont-ils écrit dans la revue Environmental Research Letters.
11 octobre 2021
Rooftop solar panels are up to 79% cheaper than they were in 2010. These plummeting costs have made rooftop solar photovoltaics even more attractive to households and businesses who want to reduce their reliance on electricity grids while reducing their carbon footprints. But are there enough rooftop surfaces for this technology to generate affordable, low-carbon energy for everyone who needs it?
09 octobre 2021
La Terre, notre « point bleu pâle » dans l'univers comme l'appelait l'astronome Carl Sagan, est de moins en moins pâle. Une récente étude publiée dans la revue « AGU - Geophysical Research Letters » montre que le réchauffement des eaux océaniques a provoqué une baisse de la luminosité de notre planète.
30 septembre 2021
HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers.
peak,
carbon,
energy,
transition,
perspective,
open,
research,
institutions,
france,
from,
public,
private,
centers,
énergies 08 septembre 2021
The research found 90% of coal and 60% of oil and gas reserves could not be extracted if there was to be even a 50% chance of keeping global heating below 1.5C, the temperature beyond which the worst climate impacts hit.
fossil,
fuels,
research,
coal,
temperature,
climate,
impacts,
oil,
gas,
focusclimat,
co2 The study from the UN University, the academic and research arm of the UN, looks at 10 different disasters that occurred in 2020 and 2021, and finds that, even though they occurred in very different locations and do not initially appear to have much in common, they are, in fact, interconnected.
disasters,
world,
news,
study,
from,
research,
2020,
2021,
catastrophes,
focusclimat,
yfc,
cnr This report has been made possible due to the funding of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, BMBF). We thank them for their support.
02 septembre 2021
Scientists have uncovered a fascinating new insight into what caused one of the most rapid and dramatic instances of climate change in the history of the Earth.
27 août 2021
Scientists are hopeful that the National Ignition Facility’s recent success will advance understanding of thermonuclear reactions.
06 août 2021
If Earth had a pulse, it might be The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) – a swirl of ocean currents that carries tropical heat north towards polar waters. Over the past century this global heartbeat has eased, slowing to a speed not seen in more than a millennium. New research based on a range of indices has now bolstered views that the weakening isn't a trivial one, and critical transition is imminent.
ocean,
collapse,
earth,
circulation,
amoc,
heat,
global,
research,
focuscollapse,
focusclimat,
océans,
méridienne,
retournement,
atlantique,
yfc,
focuscollaps,
Gulf Stream 05 août 2021
A group of leading international researchers have issued a stark new warning to governments that relying on technology alone will not be enough to address the growing climate emergency, saying that presumptions that economic growth can continue unchecked should be challenged.
Het globale voedselsysteem is de belangrijkste oorzaak voor de ecologische crisis en de klimaatontregeling. Het duwt natuurlijke systemen tot voorbij de veilige grenzen voor de mensheid, schrijven Jeremy Coller van het investeerdersnetwerk FAIRR, hoogleraar Johan Rockström van het Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research en Gunhild Stordalen, oprichter van stichting EAT.
28 juillet 2021
There are some phrases that should stop you in your tracks. The warning of a future that holds "untold suffering" is one of them. That is exactly what scientists from around the world are cautioning will happen if we don't take the threat of climate change seriously. In a paper published Wednesday in the journal BioScience, more than 14,000 scientists from 153 countries signed their name to research that warns of an incoming climate emergency.
climate,
change,
stop,
future,
from,
world,
will,
research,
focusclimat,
focuscollaps,
cop26 14 juillet 2021
A 1972 MIT study predicted that rapid economic growth would lead to societal collapse in the mid 21st century. A new paper shows we’re unfortunately right on schedule.
13 juillet 2021
Rapid filling of a giant dam at the headwaters of the Nile River—the world's biggest waterway that supports millions of people—could reduce water supplies to downstream Egypt by more than one-third, new USC research shows.
study,
impacts,
river,
world,
millions,
water,
research,
h2o,
Nil,
barrages,
rivières 05 juillet 2021
The effects of ‘weird weather’ were already being felt in the 1960s, but scientists linking fossil fuels with climate change were dismissed as prophets of doom
04 juin 2021
At the tail end of winter in 2015, the ground in the Wimmera in northwestern Victoria had been a little dry but conditions weren't too bad for farmers. The crop season was going well.
25 mars 2021
20 mars 2021
30 juin 2020
An extensive new multi-proxy database of paleo-temperature time series (Temperature 12k) enables a more robust analysis of global mean surface temperature (GMST) and associated uncertainties than was previously available. We applied five different statistical methods to reconstruct the GMST of the past 12,000 years (Holocene). Each method used different approaches to averaging the globally distributed time series and to characterizing various sources of uncertainty, including proxy temperature, chronology and methodological choices. The results were aggregated to generate a multi-method ensemble of plausible GMST and latitudinal-zone temperature reconstructions with a realistic range of uncertainties. The warmest 200-year-long interval took place around 6500 years ago when GMST was 0.7 °C (0.3, 1.8) warmer than the 19th Century (median, 5th, 95th percentiles). Following the Holocene global thermal maximum, GMST cooled at an average rate −0.08 °C per 1000 years (−0.24, −0.05). The multi-method ensembles and th
27 février 2020
We have here (in the Baltic Sea, about half a million tonnes of conventional munitions and about 40,000 tonnes of chemical weapons. Some of the conventional munitions are armed and may explode if moved. As for poisoning people and fish, we don`t have enough data to speak of probability. However, the bombs leak poisonous substances, the seabed is contaminated in their immediate vicinity (up to 250 m).
munitions,
Poland,
Pologne,
Baltic,
Baltique,
arme,
histoire,
guerre,
war,
poisson,
fish,
biodiversité,
mer,
océan 28 février 2019
09 août 2018
A new scientific paper proposing a scenario of unstoppable climate change has gone viral, thanks to its evocative description of a “Hothouse Earth”. Much of the media coverage suggests that we face an imminent and unavoidable extreme climate catastrophe. But as a climate scientist who has carried out similar research myself, I am aware that this latest work is a lot more nuanced than the headlines imply. So what does the hothouse paper actually say, and how did the authors draw their conclusions?
27 juin 2017
In the early 1970s, ecologist Barry Commoner wrote The Closing Circle, in which he discussed the rapid growth of industry and technology and their persistent effect on all forms of life. He suggested that we can reduce the negative effects by sensitizing, informing and educating ourselves about our connection to the natural world. Commoner summarized the basics of ecology into what he termed “laws of ecology.” Others have also used this idea to develop simple statements that help us understand and remember our connections to nature. Here are five laws of ecology:
07 juin 2016
06 décembre 2009
The centerpiece of the early anthropogenic hypothesis is the claim that humans took control of greenhouse-gas trends thousands of years ago because of emissions from early agriculture ( [32] and [33]). A common reaction to this claim is that too few people lived thousands of years ago to have had a major effect on either land use or greenhouse-gas concentrations.
land,
changes,
forest,
emissions,
claim,
control,
greenhouse,
agriculture,
people,
concentrations,
co2,
focusclimat