11/55
Date : 06-12-2023 16:12:36
theconversation.com/les-emissions-de-co-dorigine-fossile-ont-atteint-un-nouveau-record-en-2023-219133
Intro :
" Les émissions mondiales de dioxyde de carbone (CO2) d’origine fossile augmenteront de 1,1 % en 2023, les portant au niveau record de 36,8 milliards de tonnes de CO2. C’est la conclusion du 18e rapport annuel du Global Carbon Project sur l’état du budget carbone mondial, que nous avons publié aujourd’hui."
...
Par :
Pep Canadell
Chief Research Scientist, CSIRO Environment; Executive Director, Global Carbon Project, CSIRO
Corinne Le Quéré
Royal Society Research Professor of Climate Change Science, University of East Anglia
Glen Peters
Senior Researcher, Center for International Climate and Environment Research - Oslo
Judith Hauck
Helmholtz Young Investigator group leader and deputy head, Marine Biogeosciences section a Alfred Wegener Institute, Universität Bremen
Julia Pongratz
Professor of Physical Geography and Land Use Systems, Department of Geography, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Philippe Ciais
Directeur de recherche au Laboratoire des science du climat et de l’environnement, Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace, Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)
Pierre Friedlingstein
Chair, Mathematical Modelling of Climate, University of Exeter
Robbie Andrew
Senior Researcher, Center for International Climate and Environment Research - Oslo
Rob Jackson
Professor, Department of Earth System Science, and Chair of the Global Carbon Project, Stanford University
|