Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation and the Climate Council. In this final episode, we discuss how poorer nations are at greater risk to a changing climate.
Workers maintaining solar panels in Jakarta, Indonesia in March 2023.
Tatan Syuflana/AP
Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation, and sponsored by the Climate Council. In this episode, we discuss possible solutions to the climate crisis.
Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation, and sponsored by the Climate Council. In this live bonus episode, we discuss where to next on climate change.
Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation, and sponsored by the Climate Council. In episode five, we discuss how climate change is affecting vulnerable species.
Research on societal change should feature more strongly in the IPCC’s climate assessments. Because without a significant shift in behaviour, the emissions curve will not bend downwards.
Flooding in Nambour, Queensland, 2020.
AAP Image/Jonny Duncan
Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation, and sponsored by the Climate Council. In episode four, we discuss how climate change is affecting the water cycle.
The remains of a house which was destroyed in the New Years Eve bushfire in Mogo, NSW.
James Gourley/AAP
Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation, and sponsored by the Climate Council. In episode three, we discuss the latest advances in extreme weather attribution.
Solheimajokull, a glacier in Southern Iceland.
whatafoto/flickr
Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation, and sponsored by the Climate Council. In episode two, we discuss the latest advances for measuring climate change.
The aftermath of heavy rainfall in Chennai, India. November 2021.
EPA-EFE/Idrees Mohammed
Climate models embed colonial attitudes and massive inequality.
A comparison between two views of the same coral reef on Kiritimati, taken by University of Victoria scientists.
Danielle Claar, Kristina Tietjen/University of Victoria
Fear and Wonder is a new climate podcast, brought to you by The Conversation, and sponsored by the Climate Council. In episode one, we discuss how scientists know the climate is changing.
Already, climate change plays out in all parts of the world. Every further increment of warming will bring rapidly escalating hazards, including more intense heatwaves and heavier rainfall.
Wildfires are becoming a greater risk in many countries as the landscape dries.
Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images
The final report in the IPCC’s sixth assessment series says countries will have to cut their greenhouse gas emissions 60% in the next 12 years to keep global warming in check.
Chercheuse en sciences du climat, ancienne coprésidente du groupe de travail I du GIEC (2015-2023), directrice de recherche CEA au Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement / Institut Pierre Simon Laplace, Paris-Saclay, Université Paris-Saclay