Skip to main content

Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles and JavaScript.

Volume 9 Issue 5, May 2019

Combatting plastics emissions

The life cycle greenhouse gas emissions from plastic products are expected to increase, and could represent a substantial portion of the global carbon budget by 2050 if current trends are followed. An analysis of mitigation strategies finds that, to keep emissions below the 2015 level, an aggressive strategy of decarbonizing energy infrastructure, improving recycling, adopting bio-based plastics and reduction in demand, is required.

See Zheng and Suh

Image: Zhitong Zheng. Cover Design: Tulsi Voralia.

Editorial

  • The unexpected swell of action, sparked by a Swedish teenager, has put climate change back on the political radar. With time on their side, youth will experience longer term climate change impacts more than those in decision making positions, meaning they want a say in their future.

    Editorial

    Advertisement

Top of page ⤴

Correspondence

Top of page ⤴

Comment

  • The way in which climate change research funds are managed is shifting dramatically toward investments in large collaborative research networks. This poses significant challenges for researchers, and requires changes from the institutions and funders that support them.

    • G. Cundill
    • B. Currie-Alder
    • M. Leone
    Comment
  • Many countries are formulating a long-term climate strategy to be submitted to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change by 2020. Model-based, multi-disciplinary assessments can be a key ingredient for informing policy makers and engaging stakeholders in this process.

    • Matthias Weitzel
    • Toon Vandyck
    • Bert Saveyn
    Comment
Top of page ⤴

Books & Arts

Top of page ⤴

Feature

  • Long-term climate dynamics and impacts from sea level rise to heat stress make the case for much stronger mitigation efforts today

    • Sonja van Renssen
    Feature
Top of page ⤴

Research Highlights

Top of page ⤴

News & Views

  • Climate change exposes more people to heat waves and other extreme weather events. New research shows that experiencing a heat wave can affect concerns about energy security, but not enough to change behaviour.

    • Peter D. Howe
    News & Views
  • North American winters have varied from mild to extremely cold in recent years. Now, research provides a framework for understanding these changing temperature extremes.

    • Stephen Baxter
    News & Views
  • A fifty-year observational record of Central Amazon forest reveals the multifaceted nature of tree death and concerning signs of vulnerability to increasing heat.

    • Emanuel Gloor
    News & Views
Top of page ⤴

Review Articles

  • The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission, launched in 2002, allows monitoring of changes in hydrology and the cryosphere with terrestrial and ocean applications. This Review Article focuses on its contribution to the detection and quantification of climate change signals.

    • Byron D. Tapley
    • Michael M. Watkins
    • Isabella Velicogna
    Review Article
Top of page ⤴

Letters

  • The frequency of extreme weather events is increasing due to climate change. Here, the authors exploit regional variation in the UK summer heatwave of 2018 and find that exposure to extreme temperatures influenced concern about energy security.

    • Shaun Larcom
    • Po-Wen She
    • Terry van Gevelt
    Letter
  • Melting glaciers are increasing Himalayan glacial lakes and potentially the risk of outburst floods. An advanced automated algorithm identifies glacial lake outburst floods from Landsat images since the late 1980s to improve understanding of these events and trends in their frequency.

    • Georg Veh
    • Oliver Korup
    • Ariane Walz
    Letter
  • Fifty years of monthly observation of rainforest canopy trees in the Central Amazon reveals that drought, heat, storms and extreme rain can all increase tree mortality. Pioneers, softwoods and evergreen functional groups were particularly vulnerable.

    • Izabela Aleixo
    • Darren Norris
    • Lourens Poorter
    Letter
Top of page ⤴

Articles

Top of page ⤴

Search

Quick links