6 results on '"KUNDZEWICZ, ZBIGNIEW W."'
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2. Emerging plagiarism in peer-review evaluation reports: a tip of the iceberg?
- Author
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Piniewski, Mikołaj, Jarić, Ivan, Koutsoyiannis, Demetris, and Kundzewicz, Zbigniew W.
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- 2024
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3. Wind and solar energy in Small Island Developing States for mitigating global climate change
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Havea, Peni Hausia, Su, Buda, Liu, Changyi, Kundzewicz, Zbigniew W., Wang, Yanjun, Wang, Guojie, Jing, Cheng, Jiang, Han, Yang, Fang, Mata’afa, Fiamē Naomi, and Jiang, Tong
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- 2024
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4. COP 28: Challenge of coping with climate crisis
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Jiang, Tong, He, Xiaojia, Su, Buda, Havea, Peni Hausia, Wei, Ke, Kundzewicz, Zbigniew W., and Liu, Dong
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- 2024
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5. Emerging Risk to Dengue in Asian Metropolitan Areas Under Global Warming.
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Jing, Cheng, Wang, Guojie, Ebi, Kristie L., Su, Buda, Wang, Xiaoming, Chen, Dong, Jiang, Tong, and Kundzewicz, Zbigniew W.
- Subjects
CLIMATE change models ,AEDES aegypti ,VIRUS diseases ,DENGUE viruses ,ARBOVIRUS diseases - Abstract
Aedes sp. mosquitoes are changing their geographic range in response to climate change. This is of concern because these mosquitoes can carry dengue fever and other viral diseases. Changing weather patterns can also increase the numbers of Aedes mosquitoes, leading to greater human exposure and enhancing population health risks. We project the geographic distribution of Aedes and associated changes in populations exposed to dengue in Asian metropolitan areas under warming scenarios from 1.5°C to 5.0°C above pre‐industrial temperatures, using multi‐model ensembles. With global warming, the southern part of the Arabian Peninsula, the coast of the Arabian Sea in southern Iran, southern Pakistan in West Asia, the Korean Peninsula, most of the Japanese islands, and parts of North China in East Asia are projected to become suitable for dengue transmission. The numbers of metropolitan areas exposed to dengue is projected to change from 142 (48%) in the reference period (1995–2014) to 211 (71%) at 5.0°C warming. With the combined impact of socioeconomic and climate change, population exposure to dengue in Asian metropolitan areas is projected to increase from 263 (multi‐model range 252–268) million in 1995–2014 to 411 (394–432) million, 446 (420–490) million, 509 (475–601), 558 (493–685) and 587 (529–773) million, respectively, at 1.5°C, 2.0°C, 3.0°C, 4.0°C and 5°C warming, with an average of 2.9 million new people exposed to dengue fever in metropolitan areas each year. Plain Language Summary: Dengue fever, spread by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes, is the most serious arbovirus disease affecting Asia. With global warming, mosquitoes that may carry dengue virus continue to expand in geographic range and vectorial capacity. Continued growth of mosquito populations can lead to a considerable increase in dengue exposure, especially in urban areas, increasing public health risks. Based on the occurrence data of the two mosquito species and climate observations, we explored the correlation between different climate elements and the spread of the mosquitoes. Using the outputs of 34 global climate models, we project the probability of occurrence and mosquito vectorial capacity under different warming levels in Asia. With global warming, much of Asia's area is projected to become suitable for dengue transmission. We have also estimated the future population changes in Asian metropolitan areas, to explore the combined effects of socioeconomy and climate change on exposure to dengue. As population density continues to increase and dengue epidemic potential rises, the population exposed to potential dengue fever transmission in Asian metropolitan areas is projected to surge in the future. Information conveyed in our paper can help increase preparedness for dengue outbreaks. Key Points: With global warming, a large number of areas in Asia are projected to become emerging regions suitable for dengue transmissionThe combined effects of climate and socioeconomic changes are projected to jointly lead to a surge in the population exposed to dengueAn average of 2.9 million new people are projected to be exposed to dengue fever in metropolitan areas each year in the future [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Climate Change Will Aggravate South Asian Cropland Exposure to Drought by the Middle of 21st Century.
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Mondal, Sanjit Kumar, Su, Buda, Huang, Jinlong, Zhai, Jianqing, Wang, Guojie, Kundzewicz, Zbigniew W., Wang, Yanjun, Jiang, Shan, Jiang, Han, Zhou, Jian, and Jiang, Tong
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DROUGHT management ,DROUGHTS ,FARMS ,CLIMATE change ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,TWENTY-first century ,GOVERNMENT policy on climate change - Abstract
Drought has a paramount impact on global agriculture and food security. However, the study on future cropland areas that can incur drought is inadequate. This paper uses input parameters from 7 CMIP6 models for 7 future scenarios (SSP1‐1.9, SSP1‐2.6, SSP4‐3.4, SSP2‐4.5, SSP4‐6.0, SSP3‐7.0, and SSP5‐8.5) to measure South Asian cropland exposure to drought and its underlying factors. Some defined epochs such as 2021–2040 (near‐term), 2041–2060 (mid‐term), 2081–2100 (long‐term), and 1995–2014 (reference period) are designed to explore diverse outlooks of the change. The Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index and the Run theory methods are applied to detect drought. Results indicate an intensified cropland (under SSP4‐3.4, SSP3‐7.0, and SSP5‐8.5) in the Indo‐Gangetic Plain region of South Asia, where mostly the variation occurs among scenarios and periods. Notably, the future cropland exposed to drought will increase in the 2021–2040, and 2041–2060 periods, but it intends to decline during the 2081–2100. Relatively, the exposed cropland will upturn highest by 49.2% (SSP3‐7.0) in the mid‐term period and decrease by −8.2% (SSP5‐8.5) in the end future. Spatially, distributed cropland in the central, south‐west, and portion of the northeast of South Asia are subjective to be exposed largely, but it can drop greatly across the eastern part by the end future. Importantly, the climate change effect plays a grounding role in future exposure change over the region during the near to mid‐term periods, while the cropland change effect is predominant in the long‐term perspectives. However, these findings signify the urgency of policymaking focusing on drought mitigation to ensure food security. Plain Language Summary: Estimating drought‐induced cropland exposure is the pivotal aspect of agricultural risk assessment for drought impacts. The purposes of this study are to explore (a) how much of the cropland area would be exposed to drought under SSP scenarios; and (b) the degree to which climate change and cropland change effects contribute to changes in exposure. In this regard, we conducted a multi‐model and multi‐scenario‐based analysis to reveal variations in the cropland area exposed to drought in South Asia. Among the seven scenario combinations, the highest percentage of cropland exposed to drought was found at 49.2% (SSP3‐7.0) in the mid‐term epoch (2041–2060). The climate change effect seems to be the key contributor in the near‐term to mid‐term period, whereas it is the cropland change effect long‐term. To reduce drought risk, we recommend focusing on strong climate change mitigation policy development in the near‐ and mid‐term periods at a global scale and strict land‐use management policy interventions in the long‐term period at the regional level. Key Points: Larger cropland area will experience drought in the 2040–2060 period, while it will decline by the end of 21st centuryThe exposed cropland will increase by 49.2% under SSP3‐7.0 than that of historical timeThe climate change effect is the pivotal contributor in exposure changes over South Asia [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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