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Change & Risk

Tracking how the climate is changing and modeling the impacts of these changes on humans and the environment is essential grounding for understanding risks and developing solutions.

Climate change poses real threats that call for tough choices under deep uncertainty. The public television documentary “Managing Risk in a Changing Climate” examines how Louisiana decision makers engage with researchers and stakeholders to inform choices about how to manage risks driven by changing sea levels and storms.

Discerning the Challenge

Understanding climate change’s risks empowers us to make informed decisions, allocate resources effectively, and build a more resilient world. This knowledge provides a solid foundation for informed decision-making, resource allocation, and the development of effective mitigation and adaptation strategies. 

By identifying climate-related risks, such as extreme weather events, sea-level rise, and droughts, we can prioritize efforts to reduce vulnerability and build resilience. Additionally, understanding climate change enables us to allocate resources strategically where they will have the greatest impact. 

Moreover, educating the public about climate change fosters awareness, engagement, and support for climate action. 

“We see more and more how gradual climate change can lead to abrupt shifts in ecosystems and in economies… We will be better off if we build an early warning system for abrupt climate change that finds out our strengths our weaknesses and what might come after them.”

Richard Alley

Evan Pugh University Professor of Geosciences

Change & Risk Climate Solutions
Accelerator Projects

Impact

Pollinators Story 2

Climate-driven extreme heat may make parts of Earth too hot for humans

If global temperatures increase by 1 degree Celsius (C) or more than current levels, each year billions of people will be exposed to heat and humidity so extreme they will be unable to naturally cool themselves, according to interdisciplinary research published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Farmland Along A River

Rivers rapidly warming, losing oxygen; aquatic life may be at risk, study finds

A study shows that rivers are warming and losing oxygen faster than oceans, and it projects that within the next 70 years, river systems, especially in the American South, are likely to experience periods with such low levels of oxygen that the rivers could “induce acute death” for certain species of fish and threaten aquatic diversity at large.