Podcast appearances and mentions of eric roston

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Best podcasts about eric roston

Latest podcast episodes about eric roston

Apple News Today
Any day now, an old Soviet spacecraft will crash-land on Earth

Apple News Today

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2025 14:05


It’s a busy month for college graduations. USA Today’s Rachel Barber joins to discuss what graduates are looking for in the job market and how they’re feeling about it. Cardinal Robert Prevost was elected pope yesterday, becoming the first American leader of the Roman Catholic Church. Joshua McElwee, Vatican correspondent for Reuters, discusses the new Pope Leo XIV’s biography and positions. A decades-old Soviet-era spacecraft is set to crash-land on Earth any day now. ABC News has more. Eric Roston, sustainability editor for Bloomberg News, talks about the potential environmental impacts of decommissioned satellites that burn up in the atmosphere. Plus, why the head of FEMA was fired, major U.S. cities are sinking, and a mom and her son who plan to graduate together. Today’s episode was hosted by Shumita Basu.

Zero: The Climate Race
If 1.5C is dead, what happens next?

Zero: The Climate Race

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 22:38 Transcription Available


In December, Europe’s Copernicus weather service announced that it was “virtually certain” that 2024 would be the hottest year ever. What’s more, the global average temperature last year appears to have surpassed 1.5C for the first time, blowing past a threshold that’s taken on enormous significance in the fight against climate change. Does that mean governments, corporations, and activists recalibrate their climate goals? Akshat Rathi speaks with reporters Eric Roston and Zahra Hirji about what this new reality means. Explore further: Past episode about sci-fi writer Kim Stanley Robinson’s visions for 2025 Past episode with Eric Roston and Katharine Hayhoe about the extreme weather events brought on by rising temperatures Past episode with the Berghof Foundation’s Andrew Gilmour about conflict and peace-building on a warming planet Zero is a production of Bloomberg Green. Our producer is Mythili Rao. Special thanks this week to Sharon Chen, Siobhan Wagner, Ethan Steinberg, and Jessica Beck. Thoughts or suggestions? Email us at zeropod@bloomberg.net. For more coverage of climate change and solutions, visit https://www.bloomberg.com/greenSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Zero: The Climate Race
Making sense of “compound” climate impacts in a time of global weirding

Zero: The Climate Race

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 20:40 Transcription Available


We are living through the hottest year on record. That's not news, but growing climate impacts make bigger and bigger news. At 1.3C of warming beyond pre-industrial levels, people are reckoning with a planetary system that's out of whack. It's not like the scientists didn't see worsening impacts coming, but many of them have been surprised by the ferocity with which some have played out. On this week's episode of Zero, Bloomberg Green's Akshat Rathi speaks with his colleague Eric Roston, and Texas Tech University professor Katharine Hayhoe explains why we're all experiencing “global weirding.” Explore further: Past episode about the role fire will play in shaping the 21st century. Past episode with UN's global chief heat officer about redesigning cities. Past episode about finding trillions of dollars needed for climate adaptation. Zero is a production of Bloomberg Green. Our producers are Mythili Rao. Special thanks this week to Kira Bindrim, Anna Mazarakis and Alicia Clanton. Thoughts or suggestions? Email us at zeropod@bloomberg.net. For more coverage of climate change and solutions, visit https://www.bloomberg.com/green.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Zero: The Climate Race
Best of: How the ‘rich man's energy club' became a climate champion

Zero: The Climate Race

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 35:59 Transcription Available


This week, the International Energy Agency published its flagship report: The World Energy Outlook. It's hundreds of pages long and makes some bold claims. It says in the year 2030, there will be 10 times as many electric cars on the road as today, 80% of all new power generation will be solar or wind, and demand for fossil fuels – coal, oil and gas – will have peaked. The report is dominating climate news because what the IEA says makes a big difference to how governments tweak their energy policies. But how did an organization formed by a handful of countries in response to the 1973 oil crisis come to hold so much influence over our response to the climate crisis? For the answer, this week we're revisiting one of our favorite episodes: an interview with Fatih Birol, the head of the IEA. As we approach COP28, hosted by an oil power and led by the CEO of an oil company, it's good to understand how international organizations can be successfully transformed in the face of climate change. Read more:  Read the World Energy Outlook Global Oil Demand to Reach Its Peak This Decade, IEA Says— Bloomberg Want to know more about the IEA story? Order Akshat's book, Climate Capitalism, here. Read a transcript of this episode here Zero is a production of Bloomberg Green. Our producer is Oscar Boyd and our senior producer is Christine Driscoll. Special thanks this week to Eric Roston, Kira Bindrim and Will Mathis. Thoughts or suggestions? Email us at zeropod@bloomberg.net. For more coverage of climate change and solutions, visit https://www.bloomberg.com/green.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Big Take
New Technology Is Here To Fight Climate Change. Will We Use It?

The Big Take

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2023 27:04 Transcription Available


Despite global efforts to slow the effects of climate change, July was the hottest month on record in over 125,000 years. The good news is, powerful new technology not available just a few years ago can help turn things around, if we get serious about taking action. Bloomberg's Eric Roston, Zahra Hirji and John Ainger join this episode to discuss what it will take—and how much it will cost—to stop the warming of the world. Read more: An Overheating Planet Requires Extreme Climate Solutions Listen to The Big Take podcast every weekday and subscribe to our daily newsletter: https://bloom.bg/3F3EJAK  Have questions or comments for Wes and the team? Reach us at bigtake@bloomberg.net.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Zero: The Climate Race
Biden's climate bill is changing climate tech, and our daily lives

Zero: The Climate Race

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 29:22 Transcription Available


It's been eight months since President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act. Already the hundreds of billions of dollars it contains for clean energy and slowing climate change —alongside private venture capital investments — are funding a wide array of climate technology projects, from decarbonizing infrastructure to rust-based battery storage. This week we are sharing an episode of the Bloomberg podcast The Big Take that looks at where all the money in U.S. President Biden's signature climate bill has gone. Bloomberg climate reporter Eric Roston and senior reporter Akshat Rathi talk with Big Take host Wes Kosova about how climate tech is no longer a corner of the economy–it's fast becoming the economy. And reporter Zahra Hirji joins to talk about some of the ways the IRA's spending is starting to show up in our everyday lives. Read the story by Akshat Rathi and Eric Roston here. Find more from The Big Take, here. And help out Zero by taking our listener survey, here.  Read a transcript of this episode, here. Zero is a production of Bloomberg Green. Our producer is Oscar Boyd and our senior producer is Christine Driscoll. Special thanks to Kira Bindrim and The Big Take team. Thoughts or suggestions? Email us at zeropod@bloomberg.net. For more coverage of climate change and solutions, visit https://www.bloomberg.com/green.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Zero: The Climate Race
High hopes for biodiversity, but who will pay?

Zero: The Climate Race

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2023 34:16 Transcription Available


The world is in the middle of the sixth mass extinction and this time it's being driven by human activity. Slowing it down will provide benefits for tackling climate change, and solutions to reign in global warming will help stem biodiversity loss. But this win-win scenario isn't straightforward to put into action. In December, world leaders gathered at COP15 in Montreal and agreed upon a new global biodiversity framework, with 23 targets including a goal of protecting 30% of all land, waters and oceans by 2030. The details on how that target will be implemented, however, are vague, and vast amounts of money will be needed to fund nature protection in biodiversity-rich, economically poor countries.  Akshat Rathi speaks with Rebecca Shaw, chief scientist at the World Wildlife Fund; Monica Medina, the US assistant secretary of state for oceans and international environmental and scientific affairs; and Bloomberg Green's Eric Roston, about what it means to protect biodiversity, and who will fund it.   Read a transcript of this episode, here. Zero is a production of Bloomberg Green. Our producer is Oscar Boyd and our senior producer is Christine Driscoll. Thoughts or suggestions? Email us at zeropod@bloomberg.net. For more coverage of climate change and solutions, visit https://www.bloomberg.com/green See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Big Take
How Are the Billions in Biden's Climate Law Being Spent?

The Big Take

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2023 28:22 Transcription Available


It's been eight months since President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law. And already the hundreds of billions of dollars it contains for clean energy and slowing climate change—alongside private venture capital investments—are funding a wide array of climate technology projects, from decarbonization infrastructure to rust-based battery storage. Bloomberg climate reporter Eric Roston joins this episode with Akshat Rathi, a senior reporter and host of our sister podcast Zero. It's a weekly show that explores the tactics and technologies taking us to a world of zero emissions. They talk with Wes about how climate tech is no longer a corner of the economy–it's fast becoming the economy.  And reporter Zahra Hirji joins to talk about some of the ways the IRA's spending is starting to show up in our everyday lives. Read the story: https://bloom.bg/3LpNSpZ  Listen to The Big Take podcast every weekday and subscribe to our daily newsletter: https://bloom.bg/3F3EJAK  Have questions or comments for Wes and the team? Reach us at bigtake@bloomberg.net.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Zero: The Climate Race
How the ‘rich man's energy club' became a climate champion

Zero: The Climate Race

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 36:47 Transcription Available


How do you rebuild an international organization for the climate era? That's what the Paris-based International Energy Agency has done over the past decade. Founded in 1974 to secure oil supplies for its members, the IEA has become a leading voice on the need to cut emissions. This week on Zero, Akshat Rathi asks Fatih Birol, executive director of the IEA, when global emissions will peak, if it's possible to get there sooner, and why India's solar revolution is keeping him optimistic.  Want to know more about the IEA story? Pre-order Akshat's book, Climate Capitalism, here. Read a transcript of this episode, here. Zero is a production of Bloomberg Green. Our producer is Oscar Boyd and our senior producer is Christine Driscoll. Special thanks this week to Eric Roston, Kira Bindrim and Will Mathis. Thoughts or suggestions? Email us at zeropod@bloomberg.net. For more coverage of climate change and solutions, visit https://www.bloomberg.com/green.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Zero: The Climate Race
Why the new IPCC report is so important

Zero: The Climate Race

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 10:16 Transcription Available


The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's latest report is out and it makes for sober reading. Published roughly every seven years, IPCC reports are the most established body of knowledge on climate change and unique in that their summary gets a signoff from every country on the planet. The report's findings feature in everything from government policy to investment decisions. In this bonus episode, Akshat Rathi and Oscar Boyd talk about what the latest IPCC report says, and why it matters so much. Read more about the latest IPCC report, about how one sentence in an IPCC report changed the climate game and about how IPCC reports become a showdown between science and global politics. Read a transcript of this episode, here. Zero is a production of Bloomberg Green. Our producer is Oscar Boyd and our senior producer is Christine Driscoll. Special thanks this week to Eric Roston and Kira Bindrim. Thoughts or suggestions? Email us at zeropod@bloomberg.net. For more coverage of climate change and solutions, visit https://www.bloomberg.com/green.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

America Adapts the Climate Change Podcast
Why Climate Journalism Matters: An Inside Look at a Vital and Challenging Beat with Eric Roston of Bloomberg News

America Adapts the Climate Change Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2023 57:10


In episode 181 of America Adapts, Doug Parsons hosts Eric Roston, the Sustainability Editor at Bloomberg News (that covers the climate beat!).  We explore the world of climate journalism and the challenges that reporters face when covering this complex and ever-changing topic. From the difficulty of reporting on emerging science to the tough decisions that newsrooms make about which climate issues to focus on, Eric and I discuss some of the biggest questions facing climate journalists today. We'll also examine the thorny issue of covering climate leaders, such as the Greta Thunberg. Eric also shares insights and motivations to understand what it's like to be a climate journalist. Additionally, we'll explore the need for expanded climate newsrooms and whether this effort will stick in the long run. Join us on this fascinating journey into the world of climate reporting. Topics covered: ·         How do newsrooms decide what climate issues to focus on. ·         Should climate modeling be regulated? ·         Covering climate leaders and the Greta Thunberg conundrum. ·         Journalists use of science and staying up to date on it. ·         What motivates a climate journalist. ·         Newsrooms are expanding their climate staff: will it continue? Subscribe to the America Adapts newsletter here. Donate to America Adapts Listen to America Adapts on your favorite app here! Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/americaadapts/ @usaadapts https://www.linkedin.com/in/doug-parsons-america-adapts/ https://twitter.com/eroston https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericroston/ https://twitter.com/business Links in this episode:http://www.ericroston.com/bio/ https://www.bloomberg.com/authors/AQdgGkZhizQ/eric-roston Previous America Adapts Episodes Referenced in this Episode Ep. 121: Hazard Mitigation meets Climate adaptation with Dr. Andrew Rumbach Ep. 159:  The Federal Reserve Bank and Climate-Related Risks with Dr. Elizabeth Mattiuzzi Donate to America Adapts Follow on Apple Podcasts Follow on Android Doug Parsons and Speaking Opportunities: If you are interested in having Doug speak at corporate and conference events, sharing his unique, expert perspective on adaptation in an entertaining and informative way, more information can be found here! Now on Spotify! List of Previous Guests on America Adapts Follow/listen to podcast on Apple Podcasts. Donate to America Adapts, we are now a tax deductible charitable organization! Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Strategies to Address Climate Change Risk in Low- and Moderate-income Communities - Volume 14, Issue 1 https://www.frbsf.org/community-development/publications/community-development-investment-review/2019/october/strategies-to-address-climate-change-low-moderate-income-communities/   Podcasts in the Classroom – Discussion guides now available for the latest episode of America Adapts. These guides can be used by educators at all levels. Check them out here! The 10 Best Sustainability Podcasts for Environmental Business Leadershttps://us.anteagroup.com/news-events/blog/10-best-sustainability-podcasts-environmental-business-leaders The best climate change podcasts on The Climate Advisorhttp://theclimateadvisor.com/the-best-climate-change-podcasts/ 7 podcasts to learn more about climate change and how to fight ithttps://kinder.world/articles/you/7-podcasts-to-learn-more-about-climate-change-and-how-to-fight-it-19813 Directions on how to listen to America Adapts on Amazon Alexahttps://youtu.be/949R8CRpUYU  America Adapts also has its own app for your listening pleasure!  Just visit the App store on Apple or Google Play on Android and search “America Adapts.” Join the climate change adaptation movement by supporting America Adapts!  Please consider supporting this podcast by donating through America Adapts fiscal sponsor, the Social Good Fund. All donations are now tax deductible! For more information on this podcast, visit the website at http://www.americaadapts.org and don't forget to subscribe to this podcast on Apple Podcasts.   Podcast Music produce by Richard Haitz Productions Write a review on Apple Podcasts ! America Adapts on Facebook!   Join the America Adapts Facebook Community Group. Check us out, we're also on YouTube! Executive Producer Dr. Jesse Keenan Subscribe to America Adapts on Apple Podcasts Doug can be contacted at americaadapts @ g mail . com

The Big Take
London Strong-Arms Drivers To Go Electric

The Big Take

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 27:16


Some big, crowded cities like New York and London have tried to reduce traffic jams and air pollution with congestion fees that make it expensive to bring your car downtown.  Now London is taking things a step further. Air pollution has fallen there. So the government is trying not just to cut down on the number of cars in the city, but using carrots–and sticks–to get people to abandon their gasoline cars altogether. Eric Roston, Bloomberg's sustainability editor, joins this episode to explain why electric cars are such a big deal in tackling air pollution–and what a tall challenge it will be to make the switch on a large scale. And Feargus O'Sullivan, a contributing writer at Bloomberg CityLab, talks about what London is doing, and why other cities are watching. For more on this story: https://bloom.bg/3CsLf1Q See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Parts Per Billion
ESG Investors Get Big Win With New SEC Climate Rule

Parts Per Billion

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 21:16 Very Popular


Some good news for ESG investors, and even better news for accountants: the Securities and Exchange Commission just unveiled a new proposal that would force public companies to disclose mountains of climate change information. The proposal goes far beyond requiring disclosure of the fossil fuels a company itself uses: It would also have companies report out the carbon footprint of their supply chains and even, in some cases, of the customers who use their products. On today's On The Merits, our weekly legal news podcast, we hear from Bloomberg News sustainability editor Eric Roston about what's in this SEC proposal and why, for so-called “green investors,” this has been a long time coming. We also hear from Bloomberg Tax's Amanda Iacone about why these disclosure rules could be a boon for accountants. After all, someone has to audit all of those new corporate climate statements. Do you have feedback on this episode of On The Merits? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Big Law Business
ESG Investors Get Big Win With New SEC Climate Rule

Big Law Business

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2022 17:07


Some good news for ESG investors, and even better news for accountants: the Securities and Exchange Commission just unveiled a new proposal that would force public companies to disclose mountains of climate change information. The proposal goes far beyond requiring disclosure of the fossil fuels a company itself uses: It would also have companies report out the carbon footprint of their supply chains and even, in some cases, of the customers who use their products. On today's On The Merits, our weekly legal news podcast, we hear from Bloomberg News sustainability editor Eric Roston about what's in this SEC proposal and why, for so-called "green investors," this has been a long time coming. We also hear from Bloomberg Tax's Amanda Iacone about why these disclosure rules could be a boon for accountants. After all, someone has to audit all of those new corporate climate statements. Do you have feedback on this episode of On The Merits? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

The Sidewalk Weekly
Inequity, the internet, and Soda Pup

The Sidewalk Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2020 25:27


In the first segment [1:07-15:20], hosts Eric Jaffe and Vanessa Quirk discuss this week's top stories: Covid’s inequitable impact on low-income communities and people of color (Jennifer Valentino-DeVries, Denise Lu, and Gabriel J.X. Dance, NYT) https://nyti.ms/2JWySPO / (Robert Samuels, WaPo) https://wapo.st/34p0O8w The urbanist’s guide to the crisis and its potential impact on cities (Dan Bertolet, Sightline) https://bit.ly/2RsFTfv The power plant of the future is in your home (Daniel Oberhaus, Wired) https://bit.ly/3c5rmhJ In the second segment [15:46-22:06], the hosts interview Sidewalk’s Head of Engineering, Craig Nevill-Manning, about the resilience of the internet. (Will Douglas Heaven, MIT Tech) https://bit.ly/2y46h8I And in the final segment [22:12-24:49], the hosts share what made them smile this week. Animals take back the world (Laura Millan Lombrana and Eric Roston, Bloomberg) https://bloom.bg/2V0IO17 Dog delivers wine (Antonia Noori Farzan, WaPo) https://wapo.st/2JZ0YtC

P&L With Paul Sweeney and Lisa Abramowicz
China Trade Ceasefire Expected Soon, Punting To 2020

P&L With Paul Sweeney and Lisa Abramowicz

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2019 30:03


Michael McDonough, Chief Economist for Financial Products at Bloomberg LP, on why he expects an interim, cosmetic trade deal with China. Harold Edwards, CEO of Limoneira (Nasdaq: LMNR), on the global growth of lemon and avocado consumption, and managing the trade war. Bob Eisenbeis, Vice Chairman and Chief Monetary Economist at Cumberland Advisors, and Former Director of Research at the Atlanta Fed, on how the Fed can enact policy to mitigate repo market squeezes. Eric Roston, sustainability editor for Bloomberg, on the global climate rally, and Amazon revealing its carbon footprint. Hosted by Lisa Abramowicz and Paul Sweeney. 

The Energy Gang
Live in NYC: Are We Making Progress?

The Energy Gang

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2018 95:25


This week, we're live in New York City.Our theme: are we making progress? We're joined by special guest Eric Roston, the sustainability editor at Bloomberg.A big thanks to the Urban Future Lab, ACRE and Solar One for organizing the show as part of Clean Energy Connections.

TicToc
The UN's $2.4 Trillion Warning on Climate Change

TicToc

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2018 14:27


On Monday, the United Nations put a price tag and a deadline on what it says is needed to avoid the catastrophic damage of climate change. David Meyers speaks with Bloomberg sustainability editor Eric Roston on whether the warnings are enough to produce actual change. FOLLOW UP Eric's latest report: How the Climate-Change Debate Has Shifted, Not Ended You can follow Eric at: @eroston ---- TicToc is a daily news podcast hosted by David Meyers (@davidfmeyers), produced at Bloomberg Worldwide HQ in New York City. You can follow up with us and watch our reporting @tictoc. If you like it, be sure to rate us on iTunes, and tell your friends!

Hacked Leadership: Innovation Acceleration

bi·o·mim·ic·ry ˌbīōˈmiməkrē/ noun  the design and production of materials, structures, and systems that are modeled on biological entities and processes. -Google Biomimicry is an approach to innovation that seeks sustainable solutions to human challenges by emulating nature’s time-tested patterns and strategies. -Biomimicry Institute Nature provides the best examples of working processes yet we often engage in our world mindlessly or use brute force methods to problem-solving and innovating. How can we harness and learn from the world around us? Last week, I blogged about the Power of a Question. The question I would ask is, "Has nature found a solution to this problem?" This question opens up a world of action research, and an opportunity to look at the environment in a new way. Below are some great examples of biomimicry in action. Read more examples here. VELCRO: George de Mestral invented Velcro after his dog returned covered in burdock burrs. He looked at them under the microscope and noticed hook-like structures, and after years of experimenting, he patented velcro in 1955. SUPER ADHESIVE: Geckos scale walls and even walk upside down on surfaces using millions of microscopic hairs on their toes. Scientists used this methodology to create an adhesive where an index-card-size strip can hold up to 700 pounds holding promise as a new medical adhesive to replace sutures and staples. VACCINES - NO REFRIGERATION REQUIRED: Tardigrades, relatives of the arthropod take up to 120 years to dry out after dying. A process called anhydrobiosis protects them. Biomatrica, through an adaptation of anhydrobiosis, realized how to apply this knowledge to live vaccines, preventing the need for refrigeration for up to six months.  Resources for educators: Ask Nature Join in the Biomimicry Design Challenge Look through the lens of curiosity   Sources: Hennighausen, Amelia, and Eric Roston. "14 Smart Inventions Inspired by Nature: Biomimicry." Bloomberg.com. Bloomberg, 23 Feb. 2015. Web. 08 Apr. 2017. "What Is Biomimicry? – Biomimicry Institute." Biomimicry Institute. Web. 08 Apr. 2017.

Data Stories
059  |  Behind the Scenes of "What's Really Warming The World?" with the Bloomberg Team

Data Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2015 44:46


Hi folks! We have Blacki Migliozzi and Eric Roston from Bloomberg on the show to talk about their recent data graphic piece on climate change called "What's Really Warming The World?" The graphic shows, through a "scrollytelling," what factors may influence the world's temperature according to well-established climate models. It guides you through a series of questions and visuals to all you to see for yourself what correlates (spoiler: carbon emissions) and what does not. On the show we talk about how the Bloomberg team came up with this piece, their interaction with the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) scientists who developed the model, and the many challenges of translating important scientific knowledge into more digestible, but not simplistic, articles that everyone can read. We also talk about how they took inspiration from the children book "Where's Spot?" (which is a nice narrative technique for vis!) and all the delicate design decisions they had to make. ... And don't miss the moment when Eric drops the huge IPCC (International Panel on Climate Change) report book to give a sense of how big it is! Enjoy the show! --- This episode is sponsored by Qlik who allows you to explore hidden relationships within data that lead to insights. Qlik was named a Top 10 Innovative Growth Company by Forbes, and they published an interesting blog post analyzing the data from the ranking. Check it out! Qlik Sense allows you to create personalized visualizations and dynamic dashboards. You can download it for free at: www.qlik.de/datastories. --- LINKS What's Really Warming the World? - the Bloomberg graphics "Where's Spot?" kids book The CIMIP5 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (61 models from 28 countries evaluated and compared) The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (the big tome) The IPCC synthesis reports (much shorter and easier to read / so many visuals could be improved!) Data on global land and ocean temperature records from NASA Scientific article on NASA GISS historical simulations Article on how temperature anomalies are calculated Datasets from the Bloomberg team: Observed land-ocean temperature Responses to climate forcings 850 year Preindustrial control experiment

Everett Public Library Podcasts
The Carbon Age by Eric Roston

Everett Public Library Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2010 1:54


The Lone Reader; one librarian talks about the books he reads. The Carbon Age by Eric Roston  Music: Dark Dance Performer: Eric Kanold   time: 0:01:53 size: 1.774 mb

carbon eric roston