Fast, cheap, and imperfect? US public opinion about solar geoengineering

6th World Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists

Gothenburg, Sweden

Universität Wien Semesterfrage

Vienna, Austria

Potentially large equilibrium climate sensitivity tail uncertainty

Reply to Cox et al. (2018), Nature 553 (7688), 319-322.

University of Illinois

Champaign, IL

Factoring in the forgotten role of renewables in CO2 emission trends using decomposition analysis

Renewables decreased U.S. CO2 emissions by 2.3–3.3% from 2007-13, roughly matching the 2.5–3.6% from natural gas.

Ramsey discounting calls for subtracting climate damages from economic growth rates

Harvard Seminar in Environmental Economics and Policy

Cambridge, MA

Workshop on Frontiers in Environmental Economics

Paris, France

Norwegian School of Economics

Bergen, Norway

Stratospheric aerosol injection tactics and costs in the first 15 years of deployment

While cheap, such an aircraft-based program would unlikely be a secret

Confronting Deep and Persistent Climate Uncertainty

The massive uncertainties afflicting climate change should be a prod to policy action.

First quarterly newsletter from Harvard’s Solar Geoengineering Research Program

Solar geoengineering is at once an important and immensely difficult topic—both to research and to discuss its broader implications.

Solar Geoengineering Reading Group

Cambridge, MA

New York University

New York, NY

Harvard Project on Climate Agreements

Cambridge, MA

University of Washington

Friday Harbor, Washington

Fast, cheap, and imperfect? US public opinion about solar geoengineering

6th World Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists

Gothenburg, Sweden

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