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Putting Humans Into Climate Models
by James Arnott, Aspen Global Change Institute
May 2022 Research Review
A couple years ago, a team of climate scholars posed a provocative question: “The Earth has humans, so why don’t our climate models?” (Beckage et al., 2020). Climate models clearly show how human activities are changing the climate, but they offer only a limited view of how a changing climate is also changing us. Since human actions are at the root of climate change, the scholars argued, incorporating more about people into climate models is crucial for creating realistic climate forecasts and making informed decisions.
Researchers are beginning to respond by modeling factors like public opinion, social norms, climate risk perception, technology learning rates, and the interactions between them. The results can help explain how, and how fast, we might reduce greenhouse gas emissions, with implications for policy design and technology adoption. This new research also reminds us how the assumptions included (or ignored) in models shape collective imagination about what climate solutions are possible.
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How Climate-Induced Risks Affect Power System Planning in the U.S. Southeast
by Julie Vano, Aspen Global Change Institute
June 2021 Research Review
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Understanding Soil Carbon Science to Identify Strategies for Climate Mitigation and Adaptation
By guest authors Mark A. Bradford (Yale University), Chelsea J. Carey (Point Blue Conservation Science), Daniel A. Kane (Yale University), Emily E. Oldfield (Environmental Defense Fund), Darya Watnick (Yale University), Stephen A. Wood (The Nature Conservancy).
March 2021 Research Review
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The Paris Agreement, Five Years Later: What Research Says About Future Directions
by Emily Jack-Scott, Aspen Global Change Institute
December 2020 Quarterly Research Review
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Latest Outlooks on Biofuels
by Emily Jack-Scott, Aspen Global Change Institute
September 2020 Quarterly Research Review
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Understanding California Wildfires: Climate Trends and Response Options
by James Arnott, Aspen Global Change Institute
September 2020 Quarterly Research Review
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COVID-19 Recovery, Climate Impacts, and Co-Benefits: Stimulus Policies That Can Multi-Solve
by Emily Jack-Scott, Aspen Global Change Institute
June 2020 Quarterly Research Review
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Coal Exit: Different Approaches to Determining Costs, Benefits, and Justice Implications
by James Arnott, Aspen Global Change Institute
June 2020 Quarterly Research Review
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What Rooftop Solar Tells Us About Who's Participating (and Who's Not) in the Clean Energy Transition
by James Arnott, Aspen Global Change Institute
March 2020 Quarterly Research Review
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How Much Energy Do Data Centers Really Use?
by Eric Masanet and Nuoa Lei, Northwestern University
March 2020 Quarterly Research Review
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Energy Justice: A Complex but Vital Piece to a Clean Energy Transition
by Emily Jack-Scott, Aspen Global Change Institute
December 2019 Quarterly Research Review
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