Atmospheric Science
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 23-Apr-2025 09:08 ET (23-Apr-2025 13:08 GMT/UTC)
Climate change plans include unrealistic land demands: an area larger than the US
Lund UniversityPeer-Reviewed Publication
For the first time, an international team of scientists [WC1] have calculated the total land area that the countries of the world have included in their individual plans for climate action, known as nationally determined contributions. The results show a big divide between the countries' expected land use and the actual potential of land to mitigate climate change.
- Journal
- Nature Communications
UCF researcher receives $3.8 million grant to develop a solar energy storage system
University of Central FloridaGrant and Award Announcement
- Funder
- DOE/US Department of Energy
Climate and Economy: Even less extreme but more frequent weather events, such as thunderstorms, have significant and lasting impacts that can exacerbate inequalities. Labor incomes are among the most affected
Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, PisaPeer-Reviewed Publication
Published in the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management (JEEM), the study by researchers from the Institute of Economics and the Department of Excellence L’EMbeDS at the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa, the Department of Statistics at Penn State, and the Department of Economics at Northwestern, analyzed over 200,000 thunderstorm events in the United States between 1991 and 2019.
- Journal
- Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Mid-Pliocene informs future seasonal march of the East Asian summer monsoon
Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of SciencesPeer-Reviewed Publication
A new study reveals that the seasonal march of the mid-Pliocene East Asian summer monsoon was about 10 days earlier than today, providing implications for the future change from a paleoclimate perspective.
- Journal
- Journal of Climate
Tourism leads the pack in growing carbon emissions
University of QueenslandPeer-Reviewed Publication
Greenhouse gas emissions from tourism have been growing more than 2 times faster than those from the rest of the global economy. The study tracked international and domestic travel for 175 countries to find tourism's carbon footprint is 9% of the world's total emissions.
- Journal
- Nature Communications
What happens in the ocean when two cyclones collide
University of OldenburgPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Tellus A Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography