You are here
Local & Global Impacts of Extreme Weather: Controversial Predictions of the 5th IPCC Report 6:00pm, Monday, November 18, 2013 The New School, Wolff Conference Room 6 East 16th Street Room 1103, New York
In September, the United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) published the first of four reports providing updates on the scientific community's knowledge of climate change and its effects. The report from the first Working Group, Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis, strengthens the panel's degree of certainty that climate change is man-made and is the cause of melting ice, rising global sea levels and various forms of extreme weather. However, its language has proven controversial both to those who downplay or deny the report's claims and to those who think the conclusions are too conservative. SCEPA's Economics of Climate Change lecture series will present a panel discussion with leading climate change scientists on the major findings of the report. They will discuss its local and global predictions and what it forecasts for urban areas, agriculture, food production, and developing economies. Speakers: Peter Schlosser, What Does the the 5th Assessment Report Tell Us? Robert Kopp, Local and Global Impacts of Extreme Weather Wolfram Schlenker, Effects of Weather Change on Agricultural, Food Production & the Developing World SCEPA's Economics of Climate Change project, led by New School Professor of Economics Willi Semmler, is generously supported by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation and the German Research Foundation (DFG).
The event will be streamed live on The New School's Livestream channel. |
Recent Comments