Event
Lusaka, Zambia
The REACH project, spearheaded by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in partnership with IIASA, Lund University, the University of Brasilia, FIOCRUZ, and the University of Zambia, and funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), is beginning its fieldwork activities in Zambia
Event
Austrian Academy of Sciences-Dr. Ignaz-Seipel-Platz 2, 1010 Vienna
EQU researchers Thomas Schinko and Susanne Hanger-Kopp will host a Qualitative Systems Mapping (QSM) workshop for the Austrian Academy of Sciences' Commission on De-fossilization and Carbon Neutrality of the European Energy System (DEE).
Article: Blog Post
07 November 2024
At the COP in Baku, Azerbaijan, nation states must decide on a new climate finance regime, that will take effect from 2025. Studies show that by 2030, a sixfold increase in international financing is needed globally, for the needed mitigation investments alone. As tensions rise over who should pay, it will be difficult to achieve new and fair targets. Success is crucial to keep the Paris Agreement within reach.
The Population and Just Societies Program (POPJUS) focuses on major societal challenges and delivers insights into current and future population sizes, structures, and distributions that are fundamental to understanding human impacts on ecosystems and simultaneously, the impact of environmental changes on populations.
Article: News
05 November 2024
The SPARCCLE consortium gathered at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) from 8th to 10th October for an in-person meeting and workshops, celebrating a year of progress and planning for the next phases. The three-day event brought together consortium members from across nine countries, as well as the project’s esteemed Stakeholder Advisory Board members.
Article: News
05 November 2024
IIASA made contributions to the Computational Social Science Conference, held on October 28-29, 2024 at Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya in Barcelona. Co-organized by the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, CODATA, and “la Caixa” Foundation, the conference brought together over 160 participants, including top researchers, data specialists, and infrastructure experts, to explore cutting-edge methods, novel insights, data workflows, and data stewardship in computational social science.
Article: News
05 November 2024
New research reveals a strong link between higher female education and lower fertility rates in sub-Saharan Africa. Educated women are driving a shift toward smaller families and even influencing less educated peers. This new forecasting model offers policymakers valuable insights into how women's education shapes population trends, aiding sustainable development efforts.
Article: News
04 November 2024
The Amazon forest stores large quantities of the climate-damaging greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2). But deforestation, agriculture and rising temperatures bring this nature based solution to a limit. AmazonFACE brings together an international team of researchers aiming to address the question how the Amazon forest will respond to projected future CO2 concentrations. By using Free-Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) technology we will generate process based understanding on the functioning of the world’s largest tropical rainforest, and therefore will be able to inform regional policies on climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies.
Article: Blog Post
04 November 2024
In a new article published on The Conversation, Carl-Friedrich Schleussner, Gaurav Ganti, and Joeri Rogelj discuss the urgent need to accelerate global emissions reductions to limit global warming to 1.5°C, cautioning against reliance on overshoot scenarios that assume temporary warming above 1.5°C, which may lead to irreversible climate impacts.
Article: News
30 October 2024
Sustainable lifestyles, green-tech innovation, and government-led transformation each offer promising routes to make significant progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Paris Agreement, according to a new study by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), to which IIASA scientists contributed. Contrary to the belief that the path to sustainable development is increasingly out of reach, the results show that humankind has a variety of pathways to depart from its current unsustainable trajectory.
Article: Blog Post
29 October 2024
Who lives up to the promises made two years ago? Not many. Only about 35 countries have a strategy on how to meet biodiversity targets, says Piero Visconti, Biodiversity, Ecology, and Conservation (BEC) Research Group Leader at IIASA. But in 2022, at COP15 in Montreal, the countries pledged to preserve 30 percent of the planet’s land and seas. At the same time, rich countries also don’t live up to their promise to help the poor with financing. This COP needs to show results.