State of the Planet

News from the Columbia Climate School

April 20114

  • Celebrating Earth and Reducing Our Impact

    Celebrating Earth and Reducing Our Impact

    Earth Week 2011 (April 17-23) here at Columbia University we will focus on the area of environmental impact. Following the lead of the No Impact Project, this year’s celebration will be themed: “NO IMPACT WEEK 2011.”

  • Climate News Roundup: Week of 4/10

    Climate News Roundup: Week of 4/10

    Fewer penguins survive warming Antarctic climate, Reuters, Apr. 11 A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds that in Antarctica, only 10 percent of juvenile chinstrap and Adelies penguins now survive the first independent trip they take from their winter habitat back to their colonies, know as the penguin’s “transition…

  • Our newest Model District (in a state of 199 million people)

    Our newest Model District (in a state of 199 million people)

    We’ve launched the second of five Model Districts: in a state big enough to be the 5th largest country in the world.

  • Growing Up: Water Efficiency and Sunless Farming

    Growing Up: Water Efficiency and Sunless Farming

    As Earth’s population continues to grow and a dynamic global climate shifts our expectations of where and when food can be grown, scientists are trying to find new ways to get more from less.

  • Florence, HIV+ and her daughter, HIV negative: two faces of hope

    Post by Margaret Wagah and Joelle Bassoul Mojon A little girl in a dark red dress runs around laughing. Her mother tries to catch her, before she trips on her ruffles and falls. Florence picks up Nicole and dries her tears. A tender and loving moment between a mother and her young daughter, who is…

  • Communicating with the Six Americas of Climate Change

    Communicating with the Six Americas of Climate Change

    The 2009 study by the Yale Project on Climate Change and the George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication, “Global Warming’s Six Americas: An Audience Segmentation Analysis,” classified Americans based on their views on climate change into six groups (Alarmed, Concerned, Cautious, Disengaged, Doubtful, Dismissive). This report helped climate communicators distinguish and better attune…

  • Informing Farmers and Combating Drought in Mali

    Informing Farmers and Combating Drought in Mali

    A new case study authored by scientists at Mali’s national meteorological service and the International Research Institute for Climate and Society chronicles a success story of linking farmers to climate information in response to the 1972-1984 drought.

  • Millennium Villages Cookstove Program Honored for Supporting Community Needs

    Millennium Villages Cookstove Program Honored for Supporting Community Needs

    The Millennium Villages Project’s (MVP) Household Stove Program was recently given a special achievement award for “Meeting Community Needs” at the Partnership for Clean Indoor Air Forum’s (PCIA) bi-annual meeting in Lima, Peru.  The award is “in appreciation and recognition of the MVP’s dedication to meeting community needs through household energy interventions,” and recognized the…

  • It takes a lot of instruments to collect ice measurements!

    It takes a lot of instruments to collect ice measurements!

    The Operation IceBridge (OIB) mission is a truly collaborative project with several agencies and multiple instruments involved in collecting independent measurements. The data is then analyzed concurrently to develop an understanding of the ice processes underway. The measurement of sea ice is an excellent example of how multiple methods of measurement are needed to collect…

Columbia campus skyline with text Columbia Climate School Class Day 2024 - Congratulations Graduates

Congratulations to our Columbia Climate School MA in Climate & Society Class of 2024! Learn about our May 10 Class Day celebration. #ColumbiaClimate2024

  • Celebrating Earth and Reducing Our Impact

    Celebrating Earth and Reducing Our Impact

    Earth Week 2011 (April 17-23) here at Columbia University we will focus on the area of environmental impact. Following the lead of the No Impact Project, this year’s celebration will be themed: “NO IMPACT WEEK 2011.”

  • Climate News Roundup: Week of 4/10

    Climate News Roundup: Week of 4/10

    Fewer penguins survive warming Antarctic climate, Reuters, Apr. 11 A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds that in Antarctica, only 10 percent of juvenile chinstrap and Adelies penguins now survive the first independent trip they take from their winter habitat back to their colonies, know as the penguin’s “transition…

  • Our newest Model District (in a state of 199 million people)

    Our newest Model District (in a state of 199 million people)

    We’ve launched the second of five Model Districts: in a state big enough to be the 5th largest country in the world.

  • Growing Up: Water Efficiency and Sunless Farming

    Growing Up: Water Efficiency and Sunless Farming

    As Earth’s population continues to grow and a dynamic global climate shifts our expectations of where and when food can be grown, scientists are trying to find new ways to get more from less.

  • Florence, HIV+ and her daughter, HIV negative: two faces of hope

    Post by Margaret Wagah and Joelle Bassoul Mojon A little girl in a dark red dress runs around laughing. Her mother tries to catch her, before she trips on her ruffles and falls. Florence picks up Nicole and dries her tears. A tender and loving moment between a mother and her young daughter, who is…

  • Communicating with the Six Americas of Climate Change

    Communicating with the Six Americas of Climate Change

    The 2009 study by the Yale Project on Climate Change and the George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication, “Global Warming’s Six Americas: An Audience Segmentation Analysis,” classified Americans based on their views on climate change into six groups (Alarmed, Concerned, Cautious, Disengaged, Doubtful, Dismissive). This report helped climate communicators distinguish and better attune…

  • Informing Farmers and Combating Drought in Mali

    Informing Farmers and Combating Drought in Mali

    A new case study authored by scientists at Mali’s national meteorological service and the International Research Institute for Climate and Society chronicles a success story of linking farmers to climate information in response to the 1972-1984 drought.

  • Millennium Villages Cookstove Program Honored for Supporting Community Needs

    Millennium Villages Cookstove Program Honored for Supporting Community Needs

    The Millennium Villages Project’s (MVP) Household Stove Program was recently given a special achievement award for “Meeting Community Needs” at the Partnership for Clean Indoor Air Forum’s (PCIA) bi-annual meeting in Lima, Peru.  The award is “in appreciation and recognition of the MVP’s dedication to meeting community needs through household energy interventions,” and recognized the…

  • It takes a lot of instruments to collect ice measurements!

    It takes a lot of instruments to collect ice measurements!

    The Operation IceBridge (OIB) mission is a truly collaborative project with several agencies and multiple instruments involved in collecting independent measurements. The data is then analyzed concurrently to develop an understanding of the ice processes underway. The measurement of sea ice is an excellent example of how multiple methods of measurement are needed to collect…