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Ten new insights in climate science 2022

Authors :
Maria A. Martin
Emmanuel A. Boakye
Emily Boyd
Wendy Broadgate
Mercedes Bustamante
Josep G. Canadell
Edward R. Carr
Eric K. Chu
Helen Cleugh
Szilvia Csevár
Marwa Daoudy
Ariane de Bremond
Meghnath Dhimal
Kristie L. Ebi
Clea Edwards
Sabine Fuss
Martin P. Girardin
Bruce Glavovic
Sophie Hebden
Marina Hirota
Huang-Hsiung Hsu
Saleemul Huq
Karin Ingold
Ola M. Johannessen
Yasuko Kameyama
Nilushi Kumarasinghe
Gaby S. Langendijk
Tabea Lissner
Shuaib Lwasa
Catherine Machalaba
Aaron Maltais
Manu V. Mathai
Cheikh Mbow
Karen E. McNamara
Aditi Mukherji
Virginia Murray
Jaroslav Mysiak
Chukwumerije Okereke
Daniel Ospina
Friederike Otto
Anjal Prakash
Juan M. Pulhin
Emmanuel Raju
Aaron Redman
Kanta K. Rigaud
Johan Rockström
Joyashree Roy
E. Lisa F. Schipper
Peter Schlosser
Karsten A. Schulz
Kim Schumacher
Luana Schwarz
Murray Scown
Barbora Šedová
Tasneem A. Siddiqui
Chandni Singh
Giles B. Sioen
Detlef Stammer
Norman J. Steinert
Sunhee Suk
Rowan Sutton
Lisa Thalheimer
Maarten van Aalst
Kees van der Geest
Zhirong Jerry Zhao
Source :
Global Sustainability, Vol 5 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2022.

Abstract

Non-technical summary We summarize what we assess as the past year's most important findings within climate change research: limits to adaptation, vulnerability hotspots, new threats coming from the climate–health nexus, climate (im)mobility and security, sustainable practices for land use and finance, losses and damages, inclusive societal climate decisions and ways to overcome structural barriers to accelerate mitigation and limit global warming to below 2°C. Technical summary We synthesize 10 topics within climate research where there have been significant advances or emerging scientific consensus since January 2021. The selection of these insights was based on input from an international open call with broad disciplinary scope. Findings concern: (1) new aspects of soft and hard limits to adaptation; (2) the emergence of regional vulnerability hotspots from climate impacts and human vulnerability; (3) new threats on the climate–health horizon – some involving plants and animals; (4) climate (im)mobility and the need for anticipatory action; (5) security and climate; (6) sustainable land management as a prerequisite to land-based solutions; (7) sustainable finance practices in the private sector and the need for political guidance; (8) the urgent planetary imperative for addressing losses and damages; (9) inclusive societal choices for climate-resilient development and (10) how to overcome barriers to accelerate mitigation and limit global warming to below 2°C. Social media summary Science has evidence on barriers to mitigation and how to overcome them to avoid limits to adaptation across multiple fields.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20594798
Volume :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Global Sustainability
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.513d8e6054104d6b981e3526b45d92ee
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/sus.2022.17