Michael Grose - moving to michaelgrose.bsky.social
@ClimateGrose
Australian climate scientist - projections, attribution, climate sensitivity, impacts and communications. @IPCC_CH lead author - Atlas. Views are my own
I like to keep up with Australian and international climate science discussions - it looks like Bluesky will be better for this and less, hmm, problematic. So, I'm going to start an account there and probably delete this twitter account soon after, thx
An article from me and Blair at the Bureau to accompany the State of the Climate report - on Australia reaching the 1.5 deg milestone
Australia has already warmed by more than 1.5 degrees https://t.co/81sUKcEYco
Good job @AndrewKingClim - always a valuable comms job to do! here's my attempt from a similar cold snap a couple of years ago ๐https://t.co/JtIJ3yn5DV
It has been particularly cold this week, with a record low temperature recorded in Tasmania. Such records are increasingly rare as average temperatures continue to rise. Read more from @AndrewKingClim (@unimelb). https://t.co/p4w9tFMr8G
Discussion paper in early release โ a great group effort based on a workshop day last year on doing Extreme Event Attribution in practice in Australia and New Zealand.
https://t.co/K3PJaSpzTT
a topic I think is very interesting; drawing lessons on messaging from the origins in epidemiology (where some events are as clear and smoking and cancer, others are more like diet studies of eggs, red wine and red meat โ and communication should match)
@ubique60@readfearn Hi Paul, I don't know if you're a person or a bot - or if you are raising this in good faith or not - but we are talking about the SW corner, not the whole of Western Australia. See the same plot you show but for the SW specifically and it is very clear:
From me - Western Australiaโs unique eucalypt forests fade to brown as century-old giant jarrahs die in heat and drought. Climate change is drying the region. https://t.co/orLNN6ddIA
@HayleyJFowler@sarahinscience@MtnClimRhoades@NatRevEarthEnv first of all congratulations both on impressive work! But totally agree Hayley, if this could be extended to compound extremes and impact, cascading impacts and so on, it would be very valuable to policy makers (and the public)
@karmour_uw@PNASNews @cristiproist Thanks Kyle! Does this mean that there are further papers on the way fleshing out the different theories? Look forward to seeing what is next ๐
New paper in @PNASNews led with @cristiproist shows that a weird spatial pattern of temperature change has slowed global-mean warming since 1980. Because the pattern could evolve in the future, observed warming doesnโt help us constrain long-term warming.
https://t.co/Mnrs7V8RzK
Hobart people - please consider coming to this event to discuss the hot topic of climate tipping points, based around our report from the community: https://t.co/NSm2L9bhde
We're back! Our first event leaps into 2024 on Feb 29th (geddit!?). Should we be worried about climate tipping points? Dr Micheal Grose (@ClimateGrose) will tell us about a recent report on Australia's risk 6:30pm 29th February @hobartbrewingco