Sustain Ability. The Potsdam Dialogues - Science for a Safe Tomorrow.   /     Hotter, wetter, drier: the science behind extreme weather events

Description

Extreme weather events are on the rise. Are these events connected? Are they becoming more likely with global warming? What does science say about extreme weather events? In the new episode of the podcast ‘Sustain Ability. The Potsdam Dialogues - Science for a Safe Tomorrow’, experts Friederike Otto and Stefan Rahmstorf give insight into their latest research. They discuss attribution science, economic costs of extreme events, the art of communicating science - and what keeps them going in their personal scientific chasing of extreme weather events.

Subtitle
Join scientists Friederike Otto and Stefan Rahmstorf on a journey into the world of extreme weather
Duration
2197
Publishing date
2021-10-22 12:05
Link
https://sustain-ability-potsdam-dialogues.podigee.io/2-hotter-wetter-drier-the-science-behind-extreme-weather-events
Contributors
  Potsdame Institute for Climate Impact Research PIK
author  
Enclosures
https://cdn.podigee.com/media/podcast_43857_sustain_ability_the_potsdam_dialogues_science_for_a_safe_tomorrow_episode_570741_hotter_wetter_drier_the_science_behind_extreme_weather_events.mp3?v=1634904381&source=feed
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Join scientists Friederike Otto and Stefan Rahmstorf on a journey into the world of extreme weather

Extreme rainfall fatally flooded Western Germany a few months ago. Intense wildfires raged across several countries, from Spain to Greece, Turkey and Canada. A historic heat wave hit North America in late June this year. The new edition of the Sustain Ability Podcast from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) deals with extremes, with extreme weather events to be concise. Join extreme weather experts Friederike Otto, from the Grantham Institute of Climate Change and the Environment at the Imperial College London, and Stefan Rahmstorf, from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, on a journey into the world of extreme weather. Together, they discuss attribution science, uncertainty ranges and economic costs of extreme events. They also give insight into their experiences when it comes to the changing public view of's relationship to climate change, the art of communicating science and what keeps them going in their personal scientific chasing of everyday work with extreme weather events.