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Australia Excluded From Global Climate Talks as Policies Lag
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EU leaders must hold the green line
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Karen Lloyd on a visit to the Arctic in 2016. | Joy Buongiorno, CC BY-ND
What do you do when Covid-19 safety protocols and travel restrictions mean you cannot do your research? That is what these three scientists have had to figure out this year, as the global pandemic has kept them from their fieldwork.
A microbiologist describes the frustration of missing a sampling season in the Arctic at a time when climate change means the permafrost is an endangered resource. A biologist writes about missing for the first time the annual census of a bird population she has been studying for 35 years and the hole that leaves in her data. And natural events are not the only ones researchers are forced to skip. An environmental scientist explains how postponing a global gathering about climate change could have long-term effects for people like her who study the process – as well as for the planet.
Five Years on, Keeping the Hope of the Paris Agreement Alive and Strong - Union of Concerned Scientists
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The bust of French statesman Robert Schuman, one of the founders of the European Union, is seen while environmental activists launch a hot air balloon during a demonstration outside of an EU summit in Brussels, Belgium, Dec. 10, 2020. Credit:
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Five years ago this Saturday, nearly every country in the world adopted the Paris climate agreement in a planetary effort to stave off the most catastrophic impacts of global warming.
For more than a decade leading up to Paris, the road to an international climate pact had been paved with false starts and broken promises.
When the gavel finally came down on the accord in December 2015, Christiana Figueres who marshaled the deal into existence as head of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change says it took a moment to sink in.