Center for Fire Research and Outreach researcher Brandon Collins is featured in this Yale Climate Connections audio segment on wildfires and climate change. Collins notes that the amount of carbon absorbed and stored in forests is currently more than the amount they emit - but that can change due to increasingly common large wildfires.
ERG professor emeritus Richard Norgaard is quoted in this Chronicle of Higher Education article. "The economy ... really is the world's greatest faith-based organization," says Norgaard in a story about higher education being in a position to help the nation "move beyond the environmentally destructive imperative of ever-continuing economic growth."
ERG professor Dan Kammen is featured in this California Magazine article on state dissent on the official US stance on climate change mitigation. Kammen noted, "What withdrawal does establish is that the U.S. is no longer a major player in climate change response and policy, and that will affect where the investments go."
ERG professor Dan Kammen is featured is this Long Beach Press-Telegram article on Governor Jerry Brown's recent trip to China to partner on reducing emissions and eveloping clean burning technology. “This is a moment,” said Kammen, a science envoy for the U.S. State Department. “California is not a nation but it’s behaving as one — and that leadership mantle benefits us well here.”
ESPM professor Scott Stephens is highlighted in this SF Chronicle article on this season's increased fire risk in the Oakland hills. Stephens, co-director of the Center for Fire Research and Outreach, said that while some factors like late-season rains will help reduce the risks, “the grass just grew and grew” this winter, making fuel per acre roughly 1½ to two times the normal.
ESPM professor Todd Dawson is highlighted in this Mercury News article on Big Sur's wouthernmost redwoods, which may hold the key to understanding how redwoods respond to changing drought conditions. Dawson oversees much of the redwood ecology research that’s happening across California, and supports the approach of climbing trees to glean better information about how they live and survive in more inhospitable areas like Big Sur
ARE associate professor Michael Andersen is highlighted in this NY Times article on the critical impact of adequate food and good nutrition on academic success. "Students at schools that contract with a healthy school lunch vendor score higher" on statewide achievement tests, Anderson and colleagues reported in a study released in April. Their study found a 4-percentile improvement in test scores when students were fed healthier lunches. "While this effect is modest in magnitude, the relatively low cost of healthy vendors when compared to in-house meal preparation makes this a very cost-effective way to raise test scores," they said.
ESPM professor Ron Amundson is highlighted in this Daily Californian article on responses by city, state and university leaders to President Trump's intentions to withdraw the US from the Paris Agreement. Amundson said he would like to see the campus provide sufficient administrative and financial support to create a cohesive, mission-oriented program that addresses issues of climate change mitigation.
ERG professor Dan Kammen is a featured guest on KQED Forum, in an episode that discusses what US withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement will mean for California.