Climate

Climate

The drivers and effects of global climate change are interconnected. They cross physical, ecological, economic, political and ethical boundaries. Advancing solutions requires similar connectivity. The Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment supports research that cuts across disciplines and sectors to assess the impact of climate disruption on people and planet. This work spans most Woods centers and programs. It focuses on water supplies, agricultural production, biodiversity, ecosystem health, built infrastructure and economies. Stanford researchers from all seven schools on campus are joining forces to analyze climate risks, reduce vulnerabilities and help people mitigate and adapt to the effects of global warming.

In The News

VR Tries to Make You Care About Coral Reefs

Stanford VR lab is focus of a documentary on how virtual reality can be used to communicate climate change in an immersive and scientifically...
May 12, 2016 - By Alice Bonasio, Newsweek

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Monterey County Exceeds Water Savings Mandate

Mentions report co-authored by Woods-affiliated postdoctoral scholar Daniel Horton (Earth System Science) and Senior Fellow Noah Diffenbaugh (...
April 6, 2016 - By David Castellon, The Californian (USA Today)

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California’s Extreme Dry Patterns are Becoming More Common, Study Says

Cites research co-authored by Woods-affiliated postdoctoral scholar Daniel Horton and Senior Fellow Noah Diffenbaugh (Earth System Science...
April 4, 2016 - By Angela Fritz, Washington Post

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California May Be in for Greater Weather Extremes

Discusses future of more extreme weather in light of study co-authored by Woods-affiliated postdoctoral scholar Daniel Horton (Earth System...
April 1, 2016 - By Daniel Swain, KQED

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