Columbia Climate Scientist James Hansen Warns World Nearing Climate Change Tipping Point
Survey Affirms Human-Caused Warming Responsible for Global Environmental Changes
Columbia Scientists Warn of Modern-Day Dust Bowls in Vulnerable Regions
Scientists Make First Map of Emerging Disease Hot Spots
First Survey of New Yorkers on Climate Change Finds Majority Worried about Impacts
New York Observer, July 7
Professor Steve Cohen's Blog: Governor David Paterson’s First 100 Days: A Green Governor?
Newsweek, July 7 issue
Professor Jeffrey Sachs: Land, Water and Conflict
Xinhua News Agency, June 26
Summit on Public Heath, Global Warming Held at Columbia University
The New York Times, June 23
Years Later, Professor Hansen Renews His Call for Action
Special from The Record
Columbia University has established its first center focused on bringing together the scientists, engineers, public health experts, foreign policy specialists and others who are working on the pressing challenges of climate change.
The Columbia Climate Center, part of the Earth Institute but encompassing other parts of the University, is an outgrowth of Columbia’s leadership in earth and environmental sciences, said its director, Peter Schlosser.
“Climate research has always been a strong part of Columbia and can be traced all the way back to the early work of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory,” said Schlosser, who is also the Vinton Professor of Earth and Environmental Engineering and Applied Science in the department of earth and environmental sciences. “The Columbia Climate Center builds on these contributions to move toward a solution-oriented approach to a problem that is so multidimensional.”
The center’s goals are to advance scientific knowledge about climate change; analyze policy; and put forward solutions to real-world problems. A key challenge, and one familiar to academia, will be getting out the message, both to educate the public and influence policymakers. On Jan. 31, the center will host a discussion on climate change showcasing the interdisciplinary expertise at Columbia as part of Focus the Nation, a nationwide day to raise the profile of climate change in the United States.
“We aim to improve the pathways of communication so that the results of our research reach both decision makers and society at large,” said Mary-Elena Carr, the center’s associate director and a biological oceanographer who comes to Columbia from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Both Schlosser and Carr emphasize the inter-disciplinary nature of the center and its mission; they
note that its success depends on close collaboration among experts from different disciplines, research centers and programs accross the University.
“None of the existing climate-related centers at Columbia can address the entire spectrum of climate impacts, yet each center plays a key role,” Schlosser said.
By the end of this year, Schlosser and Carr hope to make the center the hub for climate-related science at Columbia.
Five years from now, Schlosser said, “we hope to have established projects in which we have channeled innovative fundamental research into specific strategies ready for implementation.”
- Story by Clare Oh.
© Columbia University