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Reporting extreme weather and climate change, A guide for Journalist
Profile image for Chris Harding
Chris Harding
 — Chemical Engineer and Biological Scientist
3 years ago

This November's MIT Alumni for Climate Action (MACA) journal club presentation and discussion will be on determining if a weather event is caused by climate change or not. 

The presenter, a Yale postdoctoral fellow in physics and leader of MACA education, shared the journal articles she will be presenting on[2,3]. One of the articles is located at World Weather Attribution, which is a collection of scientists who volunteer their time to analyze and write. While at the site, I found[1] for journalists. It has been helpful to me as well. I have only read 10 pages, so far, and will read the rest tomorrow. It is very informative.

References: 

[1] Clarke, Ben; Otto, Friederike. Reporting extreme weather and climate change, A guide for Journalists. World Weather Attribution 

[2] Allen, M. Liability for climate change. Nature 421, 891–892 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1038/421891a

[3] Zachariah, M. et al. Climate Change made devastating early heat in India and Pakistan 30 times more likely. (World Weather Attribution, 2022).

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Profile image for Juan cesar

Gooded, climatologia is explexs, in volumétrica responsory action atropct veras calculation for substrato of danos proy in plol dof resolutivo problema dosent solo social advetent invitual in sintetc analisander efect batlefy Thais com.

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