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  • Economic research is starting to pay increasing attention to the social impacts of significant (if less likely) climatic events.

    Editorial
  • Most city councils are still struggling to raise environmental standards for buildings.

    • Elisabeth Jeffries
    Feature
  • The value of the social sciences to climate change research is well recognized, but notable gaps remain in the literature on adaptation in agriculture. Contributions focus on farmer behaviour, with important research regarding gender, social networks and institutions remaining under-represented.

    • Debra Davidson
    Commentary
  • Expert judgement is often used to assess uncertainties in model-based climate change projections. This Perspective describes a statistical approach to formalizing the role of expert judgement, using Antarctic ice loss as an illustrative example.

    • Michael Oppenheimer
    • Christopher M. Little
    • Roger M. Cooke
    Perspective
  • The unprecedented recent intensification of the Pacific trade winds cannot simply be explained by natural variability alone. Now research finds that the more local influence of sulfate aerosols of human and volcanic origin play a significant role, in addition to the Pacific's coupling to the Atlantic Ocean via the 'atmospheric bridge'.

    • Mark Collier
    News & Views
  • Satellite records combined with global ecosystem models show a persistent and widespread greening over 25–50% of the global vegetated area; less than 4% of the globe is browning. CO2 fertilization explains 70% of the observed greening trend.

    • Zaichun Zhu
    • Shilong Piao
    • Ning Zeng
    Letter
  • The Pacific trade winds have been strengthening over the past two decades, but until now the cause of this has not been known. Now research shows that sulfate aerosols caused the western North Pacific Ocean to warm, leading to the trade-wind intensification.

    • Chiharu Takahashi
    • Masahiro Watanabe
    Letter
  • Detection and attribution of sea-level rise is hampered by the lack of historical model estimates for the individual components. Now research bridges this gap and uncovers an accelerating anthropogenic contribution over recent decades.

    • Sönke Dangendorf
    News & Views
  • Analysis of anthropogenic and natural contributions to twentieth-century sea-level rise shows natural contributions dominated in the early years. After 1970, anthropogenic forcing becomes the dominant contributor to sea-level rise.

    • Aimée B. A. Slangen
    • John A. Church
    • Kristin Richter
    Letter
  • Changes in the terrestrial water balance are expected in many regions, but small islands remain difficult to assess. Research now reveals a tendency towards increased aridity in over 73% of island groups (home to around 16 million people) by mid-century.

    • Kristopher B. Karnauskas
    • Jeffrey P. Donnelly
    • Kevin J. Anchukaitis
    Letter
  • After the global financial crisis, regulators turned their attention to non-traditional threats to financial assets, including the impacts of climate change. A new study estimates the magnitude of that threat, and shows investors should take it seriously.

    • Sabine Fuss
    News & Views