Feature Article

susan's picture

Energy access and living standards: some observations on recent trends

A subset of Sustainable Development Goals pertains to improving people's living standards at home. These include the provision of access to electricity, clean cooking energy, improved water and sanitation. We examine historical progress in energy access in relation to other living standards. We assess regional patterns in the pace of progress and relative priority accorded to these different services. Countries in sub-Saharan Africa would have to undergo unprecedented rates of improvement in energy access in order to achieve the goal of universal electrification by 2030.

1-9
Publication Date: 
10/02/2017
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sheeja's picture

Energy access and living standards: some observations on recent trends

A subset of Sustainable Development Goals pertains to improving people’s living standards at home. These include the provision of access to electricity, clean cooking energy, improved water and sanitation. We examine historical progress in energy access in relation to other living standards. We assess regional patterns in the pace of progress and relative priority accorded to these different services. Countries in sub-Saharan Africa would have to undergo unprecedented rates of improvement in energy access in order to achieve the goal of universal electrification by 2030.

10
12
Publication Date: 
10/02/2017
Main Topic: 
Name of the Journal: 
susan's picture

Half-metre sea-level fluctuations on centennial timescales from mid-Holocene corals of Southeast Asia

Sea-level rise is a global problem, yet to forecast future changes, we must understand how and why relative sea level (RSL) varied in the past, on local to global scales. In East and Southeast Asia, details of Holocene RSL are poorly understood. Here we present two independent high-resolution RSL proxy records from Belitung Island on the Sunda Shelf.

1-16
Publication Date: 
10/02/2017
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susan's picture

Recent increase in oceanic carbon uptake driven by weaker upper-ocean overturning

The ocean is the largest sink for anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2), having absorbed roughly 40 per cent of CO2 emissions since the beginning of the industrial era. Recent data show that oceanic CO2 uptake rates have been growing over the past decade, reversing a trend of stagnant or declining carbon uptake during the 1990s. Here we show that ocean circulation variability is the primary driver of these changes in oceanic CO2 uptake over the past several decades.

215-218
Publication Date: 
09/02/2017
542
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susan's picture

Ocean circulation drove increase in CO2 uptake

The ocean's uptake of carbon dioxide increased during the 2000s. Models reveal that this was driven primarily by weak circulation in the upper ocean, solving a mystery of ocean science.

169–170
Publication Date: 
09/02/2017
542
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susan's picture

After the ice goes

Researchers look into the future of the far North for clues to save species and maybe even bring back sea ice.

Original Source

152-154
542
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09/02/2017
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susan's picture

Wheat rust back in Europe

An infection that struck wheat crops in Sicily last year is a new and unusually devastating strain of fungus, researchers say — and its spores may spread to infect this year’s harvests in Europe, the world’s largest wheat-producing region.

Original Source

145–146
542
Publication Date: 
09/02/2017
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sheeja's picture

Extinctions, genetic erosion and conservation options for the black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis)

The black rhinoceros is again on the verge of extinction due to unsustainable poaching in its native range. Despite a wide historic distribution, the black rhinoceros was traditionally thought of as depauperate in genetic variation, and with very little known about its evolutionary history. This knowledge gap has hampered conservation efforts because hunting has dramatically reduced the species’ once continuous distribution, leaving five surviving gene pools of unknown genetic affinity.

16
Publication Date: 
08/02/2017
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susan's picture

Humans have already increased the risk of major disruptions to Pacific rainfall

Intermittent disruptions to rainfall patterns and intensity over the Pacific Ocean lasting up to B 1 year have major impacts on severe weather, agricultural production, ecosystems, and disease within the Pacific, and in many countries beyond. The frequency with which major disruptions to Pacific rainfall occur has been projected to increase over the 21st century, in response to global warming caused by large 21st century greenhouse gas emissions.

1-7
Publication Date: 
08/02/2017
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susan's picture

Adapting astronomical source detection software to help detect animals in thermal images obtained by unmanned aerial systems

In this article, we describe an unmanned aerial system equipped with a thermal-infrared camera and software pipeline that we have developed to monitor animal populations for conservation purposes. Taking a multi-disciplinary approach to tackle this problem, we use freely available astronomical source detection software and the associated expertise of astronomers, to efficiently and reliably detect humans and animals in aerial thermal-infrared footage.

1-16
Publication Date: 
06/02/2017
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