Climate anxiety: Too little, too late?
26:07 | Are we prepared to change the way we live to avert the worst of outcomes? Guests: Clara Mayer (Fridays for Future), Alan Posener (journalist, Die Welt), Stefan Rahmstorf (climatologist).
26:07 | Are we prepared to change the way we live to avert the worst of outcomes? Guests: Clara Mayer (Fridays for Future), Alan Posener (journalist, Die Welt), Stefan Rahmstorf (climatologist).
Stefan Rahmstorf spoke about Arctic Tipping Points in a Plenary Session during the #ArcticCircle2019 Assembly.
6:59 | Sea-level rise is one of the inevitable results of global warming.
9:25 | Stefan Rahmstorf talks about the role of the Paris Agreement in 2015, why we need to aim higher if we want to keep global temperature increase at or below 2°C.
4:05 | Stefan Rahmstorf talks about the devastating heat waves that will characterise the climate of 2100 if the global mean temperature becomes 4°C warmer than preindustrial temperatures.
11:28 | Stefan Rahmstorf talks about the premise behind the paper “Why the right climate target was agreed in Paris”.
12:25 | Climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf talks about his research on global sea level rise, extreme weather events, the Gulf Stream System and the role of the Paris Agreement in 2015.
31:32 | Observations show that the seas are indeed rising, and that the rise in the 20th Century is unique in the context of the previous millennia.
12:25 | Professor Stefan Rahmstorf, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research redegør her for hvorfor vi kan forvente mere ekstremvejr.
5:44 | Professor Stefan Rahmstorf – A slowdown or even collapse of the Gulf Stream System as a result of global warming has long been a concern of climate scientists and has fuelled the imagination of Hollywood.
2:21 | Stefan Rahmstorf and Michael E. Mann talk about tipping points and the science of climate change.
2:05 | Stefan Rahmstorf and Michael E. Mann talk about denial and the science of climate change.
9:27 | How stable are the huge ice masses in the face of global warming?
39:08 | The carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere has risen to the highest value of the last million years. At the same time, global average surface temperatures have increased by 0.8°C.