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Susan Joy Hassol: Communications 1.5C in the rearview. Part 2.

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The 2015 Paris Agreement set a goal of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees C. In the years since, the language of that goal has crept into thousands of corporate sustainability reports, media discourse, and the language of international climate diplomacy.

Then, last week two research papers - in Nature Climate Change from a team mostly at Imperial College London and Oxford Open Climate Change from a team led by legendary climate scientist James Hansen - suggested that it is now impossible to remain under 1.5C.

If we’ve been telling that story for 8 years, including that number - saying the path to stay under 1.5 is still open, and it’s increasingly sunk in to a wider and wider audience - what happens when the science says that the narrative is no longer supported by the evidence? What now?

Our first episode centred around a conversation with author and clean energy analyst Ketan Joshi. You can go back and listen to it first but this episode works fine on its own.

For the second part of this Wicked Problems mini-series, spoke to one of the world’s most respected climate science communicators, Susan Joy Hassol. She is director of Climate Communication. For 30 years, she has been translating climate science into English - making it digestible for the public and policymakers. She's written and edited key climate reports, including the first three US National Climate Assessments; she’s testified to the US Senate; she’s written a documentary for HBO. In just the last two years she has written 15 op-eds for outlets including the New York TimesThe Washington Post, the Guardian, the IndepdendentScientific American, and many others. For her service in making climate science understandable, she has been made a fellow of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). And this year she was named Friend of the Planet 2023 by the National Centre for Science Education.

For more of Susan Joy Hassol’s work:

Climate Communication

BBC interview on the language of climate change

Scientific AmericanThe Right Words Are Crucial to Solving Climate Change

* Susan on X (formerly Twitter)

Other resources mentioned in the show:

Stories to Save the WorldSolitaire Townsend, Futerra

Climate Capitalism, by Akshat Rathi




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Broadcast on:
06 Nov 2023