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Search Result for “Antarctica”

Showing 1 - 10 of 14

OPINION

How to give expert advice in transformational times

Oped, Robert Lempert, Published on 11/11/2025

» I am a policy analyst. My job is to provide expert information to decision makers and the public to help improve public policy. This job, always hard, has become harder.

OPINION

Border disputes need a smarter path

News, Sally Tyler, Published on 27/02/2025

» Though I live in Washington, DC, I generally spend some time each year in Thailand. When I visited recently, I was interested in noting the renewed controversy around the MOU 44 with Cambodia concerning Koh Kut and the overlapping claims area. While there are obvious parallels with the Preah Vihear conflict, using the dispute surrounding the celebrated temple complex as a guide for an effective resolution in Koh Kut will prove unsatisfactory for all parties.

OPINION

Will humans survive the next 100 years?

Oped, Peter Singer, Published on 24/08/2024

» In May, experts from many fields gathered in Montenegro to discuss "Existential Threats and Other Disasters: How Should We Address Them." The term "existential risk" was popularised in a 2002 essay by the philosopher Nick Bostrom, who defined it as referring to risks such that "an adverse outcome would either annihilate Earth-originating intelligent life, or permanently and drastically curtail its potential".

OPINION

Transboundary water governance

Oped, Genevieve Donnellon-May, Published on 04/01/2024

» As recent discussions at COP28 showed, water is increasingly important on the global security and climate agenda. Yet cross-border river governance still remains one of this century's most pressing concerns and an often overlooked geopolitical issue.

OPINION

Himalayas key to climate battle

News, Sophia Kalantzakos & Kunda Dixit, Published on 15/05/2023

» In our collective imagination, the Himalayas -- the roof of the world -- are an archetype: glistening white, distant, even otherworldly. Climbing them is proof of humanity's daring, courage and drive. And yet, despite rising 6,993 metres above sea level, the summit of Mount Machapuchare in central Nepal resembled a black rock pyramid this winter, devoid of ice and snow. Glaciers near Mount Everest have turned into large lakes.

OPINION

Freddy and the Ice: Messages From the Future

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/03/2023

» Two new things on the climate front this week, both bad news. Typhoons used to be like drive-by shootings: one pass, one hit and then gone. Now they're starting to come back for a second hit.

OPINION

Will the Cop27 meet bring dread or hope?

News, Andrew Steer & Kelly Levin, Published on 14/11/2022

» Ask two different climate experts at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Egypt (Cop27) to characterise their feelings about the future, and you may get quite different answers. "We are seeing more progress than we ever imagined," says one, while the other laments that we are heading full tilt like lemmings over the cliff. They can't both be right, can they?

OPINION

How to stop sea level rise at its source

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/06/2022

» 'Ninety percent of ice flowing to the sea from the Antarctic ice sheet, and about half of that lost from Greenland, travels in narrow, fast ice streams measuring tens of kilometres or less across. Stemming the largest flows would allow the ice sheets to thicken, slowing or even reversing their contribution to sea-level rise."

OPINION

Global glacial meltdown happening fast

Oped, Jorge Daniel Taillant, Published on 05/01/2022

» We've all heard the tragic stories of glaciers in peril: pieces of ice, the size of continents, breaking off of Antarctica or melting away in the Arctic Ocean near the North Pole, leaving polar bears starving and clutching onto remnants of crumbling sea ice.

OPINION

Urgent reforms needed to protect bird numbers

News, Peter Singer & David S Wilcove, Published on 28/12/2021

» Birds are found worldwide, in many different environments, from penguins in Antarctica to pigeons in Trafalgar Square, and from the familiar sparrows on our lawns to the great albatrosses who spend years at sea without ever touching land. There are more than 10,000 species totalling many billions of wild individuals. To this we must add the tens of billions of birds we raise for their meat or eggs, and others we keep as pets.