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Global Environmental Change “An exploration of both the scientific causes of global environmental change and the integrative and complex nature of the societal response to such changes”. We strive to give you an appreciation of the “big picture”, and to remind you of the reasons why global environmental issues are at the forefront of the political, as well as the scientific agenda. We also aim to encourage a cross-disciplinary approach to problems and research in global change. The course has three elements A taught element – the guest lectures A research element – the project A dissemination element – the conference Week No Time Room 1-7 Tuesdays 14.00-17.00 EFRY 01.02 8-10 Tuesdays 14.00-17.00 EFRY 0.03 & EFRY 1.02 1, 6, 7 Wednesdays 10.00-12.00 LT4 2-4 Wednesdays 11.00-12.00 EFRY 01.02 5 Wednesday 10.00-12.00 EFRY 01.08 8-10 Wednesdays 10.00-12.00 EFRY 0.04 & EFRY 0.07 11 Wednesdays 09.00-17.00 EFRY 01.08 & S0.31 The guest lectures • During weeks 2 through 7, we have arranged for a series of distinguished speakers to address you on topics of major concern in global environmental change. You will find the talks and brief biographies of the lecturers, at http://www.uea.ac.uk/env/teaching/gec_lectures/welcome. • • • • • Prominent people with distinctive views and positions of influence Contributors to the debate about global change. Lecturers have complete freedom to address you as they wish “keynote talk” types of presentation Opportunity for interaction after the lecture • Assessment associated with the lectures: For each lecture, we require that you write a short (~ 1 page) appreciation or critique of some aspect of the talk. – – – • This can be something you found particularly interesting in lecture or something you particularly agree, or particularly disagree, with the speaker about. Reference to other literature encouraged Three of these one-page comments will be assessed – 33 % of course assessment. W Slot k Date Room Topic Presenter 2 14.0017.00 Tues 18 Jan EFRY 01.02 Valuing nature: price tags versus deliberation Prof Kerry Turner CBE, Director, CSERGE 2 11.0012.00 Wed 19 Jan EFRY 01.02 Can society adapt to climate change? Prof Mike Hulme, Executive Director, Tyndall Centre 3 14.0017.00 Tues 25 Jan EFRY 01.02 Antarctica and global change Prof Chris Rapley CBE, Director, British Antarctic Survey 3 11.0012.00 Wed 26 Jan EFRY 01.02 Assessing the environmental impact of GM crops Prof Phil Dale, John Innes Centre 4 14.0017.00 Tues 1 Feb EFRY 01.02 From the past to the future Dr Tim Lenton, Environmental Sciences 4 11.0012.00 Wed 2 Feb EFRY 01.02 Biodiversity and global change Prof Andrew Watkinson, Environmental Sciences 5 14.0017.00 Tues 8 Feb EFRY 01.02 The natural carbon cycle in the 21st century Prof Peter Cox, Hadley Centre 5 10.0012.00 Wed 9 Feb EFRY 01.08 People, resources and climate Lord Oxburgh KBE FRS, Shell International Limited 6 14.0017.00 Tues 15 Feb EFRY 01.02 The climate problem: diagnosis, prognosis, therapy Prof John Schellnhuber CBE, Research Director, Tyndall Centre 6 10.0012.00 Wed 16 Feb LT4 The skeptical environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg, Department of Political Sciences, University of Aaarhus, Denmark 7 14.0017.00 Tues 22 Feb EFRY 01.02 Sustainability: from the natural to the human world Sir Crispin Tickell GCMG KCVO, formerly UK ambassador to the United Nations 7 10.0012.00 Wed 23 Feb LT4 Environmental groups –science based or scaremongering? Mike Childs, Campaign Coordinator, Friends of the Earth Aspects of the Environmental Change Debate • • • • Academic and scientific Economic and social Environmental Campaigns and awareness National and international relations and politics Subjects • Climate Change: – Science: • Carbon cycle • Antarctica – Society and adaptation • The goal of sustainability – A political perspective – People, resources and climate – Valuing nature • Genetically modified organisms • Biodiversity and ecosystem change • The Earth as a system – What the past tells us – Properties of the system • Environmental campaigns and NGOs Guest lectures Professor Kerry Turner CBE Director, CSERGE, UEA Valuing nature: price tags versus deliberation Kerry Turner is the Director of CSERGE and a Professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia (UEA). Kerry specialises in environmental economics, coastal zone and wetland management, conservation economics and waste management research. He has published widely on these subjects including a number of best selling texts. Professor Mike Hulme Executive Director, Tyndall Centre, UEA Can society adapt to climate change? Mike Hulme is executive director of the Tyndall Centre, a mulit-institute centre that is the UK’s main body for research into adaptation to global change. The Tyndall centre is concerned with the construction and application of climate change scenarios for impact, adaptation and integrated assessment. Also the evaluation of climate models, the development of global and national observational climate data sets, and African climate and desertification. Professor Chris Rapley CBE Director, British Antarctic Survey Antarctica and Global Change Chris has been Director of the British Antarctic Survey since 199, the body that undertakes most of the UK research on the Antarctic continent and in the Southern Ocean. A substantial proportion of that research is related to global change, with signals of past climate change unlocked from ice cores and lake sediments, discovery and monitoring of the Antarctic ozone depletion, and studies of present Guest lectures Professor Phil Dale John Innes Centre Assessing the environmental impact of GM crops Phil Dale is a Professor in the Department of Crop Genetics at the John Innes Centre. The main focus of Phil's research has been on the production and analysis of transgenic plants. He is particularly interested in the interface between science and society, and especially in the opportunities and challenges presented by advances in molecular genetics. Dr Tim Lenton Reader in Earth System Analysis, Environmental Sciences, UEA From the past to the future Tim Lenton has recently joined the Environmental Sciences faculty as a reader in Earth systems science. He is a recipient of a 2004 Phillip Leverhulme prize, given “to recognise the outstanding research achievements of young scholars of distinction and promise”. His current research includes Earth system modelling, Gaia theory, and co-evolution of life and the environment. Professor Andrew Watkinson Professor of Ecology (ENV/BIO, UEA), Director of the Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Conservation, Tyndall Centre Programme Manager for Managing Coastal Zones Biodiversity and global change Andrew's research interests centre around population ecology and its application to conservation, agricultural and coastal systems. He was one of the successful coapplicants for the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and is currently programme manager for the section on 'Managing Coastal Zones'. Recent research in the coastal zone has focused on an analysis of the aggregative and functional responses of herbivores and their consequences for plant populations. Guest lectures Professor Peter Cox Head of climate, chemistry and ecosystems at Hadley Centre, UK The natural carbon cycle in the 21st century The Met Office Hadley Centre is widely regarded as the world leader in modelling climate change and its effects. Peter Cox headed the group that developed the first climate model with an interactive description of the Earth’s vegetation, enabling projections of the global carbon cycle into the future. Lord Oxburgh KBE FRS People, resources and climate Ron Oxburgh followed a distinguished career as an earth scientist at Oxford University, with a spell as the chief scientist at the Ministry of Defence and the role of Rector of Imperial College. Recently he has taken on the role of Senior Independent Chairman at Shell International Limited. He is unusual in having both a strong voice in the oil industry and the perspective of the concerned scientist. Professor John Schellnhuber CBE Research Director, Tyndall Centre, UEA The climate problem: diagnosis, prognosis, therapy Born in 1950 in Ortenburg, Germany, John trained in physics and mathematics and in 1993 became Founding Director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). He has published more than 150 articles and books on solid state physics, the theory of complex non-linear systems, coastal zone research, and regional and global environmental analysis. Guest lectures Dr Bjørn Lomborg Department of Political Sciences, University of Aarhus, Denmark The Skeptical Environmentalist Bjørn Lomborg is an associate professor of statistics in the Department of Political Science at the University of Aarhus. In 1998 he published four lengthy articles about the state of our environment in the leading Danish newspaper, which resulted in a firestorm debate spanning over 400 articles in major metropolitan newspapers. The articles lead to the publication of The Skeptical Environmentalist in 2001, which has now been published in Danish, Swedish, Icelandic, German, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, French, Korean and Japanese. Sir Crispin Tickell GCMB KCVO DCL Formerly UK Ambassador to the United Nations and Warden of Green College, Oxford Sustainability, from the natural to the human world A former member of the British Diplomatic Service and Warden of Green College, Sir Crispin is currently Chancellor at the University of Kent at Canterbury. He has worked within numerous national and international scientific academic and professional organisations and throughout his career Sir Crispin has been involved with the public policy implications of scientific understanding. He has written and contributed to numerous books on environmental issues including human population and biodiversity. Mike Childs Formerly campaign Coordinator, Friends of the Earth Environmental groups: science-based, or scaremongering The Projects • Review or research an aspect of global change or response to such change • (mostly) Multidisciplinary • Mixed-expertise groups, formed by ranking your interests • Bidding process to assign projects The project report • In sections, including abstract/exec summary, introduction, conclusions. • At least one section “signed” by each group member • Size: 25 pages min, 50 pages max. • 50% of the course assessment Project Mentors • ENV Postgrad students, researchers and faculty • Use some of the expertise in ENV that undergrads otherwise rarely see Mentor Title 1 Julian Andrews (faculty) The end of the dinosaurs: with a bang, or a whimper? 2 Karabi Biswas (Pg student) Acid rain, is the problem over? 3 Peter Brimblecombe (Faculty) Climate change and the weatherning of building materials 4 Ramzah Dambul (PG student) Transboundary atmospheric pollution in SE Asia 5 Suraje Dessai (PG student) Can local adaption to climate change bring global benefits? 6 Marie Ekstrom (researcher) UK Rainfall extremes, present and projected 7 Simon Gerrard (Faculty) The potential for Carbon reduction by non-standard mechanisms 8 Claire Hanson (researcher) Climate change and the North Atlantic Storm track 9 Zack Hickman (PG student) The impact of clean-up methods and legislation on organic contaminant levels in soils Title Mentor Title 10 Jamie Kettle (researcher) Climate change impact on cod and herring fisheries 11 Matt Livermore (PG student) Climate change and heat stress in humans: is there a real threat? 12 Farhad Nejadkoorki (PG student) The impact of road traffic on CO2-induced climate change 13 Tim O'Riordan (Faculty) 1) Biodiversity and global livelihoods; 2) Designing wildlife refuges for future global warming scenarios 14 Jane Powell (researcher) Will a hydrogen economy contribute to a sustainable future? 15 Glen Richardson (Phd Student) The Day After Tomorrow: Do climate models really say we will be plunged into an ice age? And how do the public perceive the issue? 16 Gill Seyfang (researcher) Mud, straw and tyres: is low impact development a sustainable housing solution? 17 Andrew Watkinson (faculty) How should we respond to sea level rise in the UK? Title Project timetable • Week 1 – rank interests of students • Week 2 – Assign groups • Week 3 – bid for projects: initial meetings with mentors • Week 3 – 10 research and write up. • Week 10 end – hand in • Week 11 – Presentations at Conference Conference • Wednesday 20th April – Week 11 • Two parallel sessions • Each group gives presentation (15% of course assessment) • Lunch, wine reception • Evening – ENV ball at the Assembly rooms in the city.