Trois trafiquants de drogue en cavale interpellés en France et en Espagne ouest-france.fr - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ouest-france.fr Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Through the chaos that was 2020, scientists continued to dig into how human activity is altering the climate and vice versa.
Last week, a group of 57 leading researchers presented 10 of their most important new findings to the United Nations in the hopes that they will help shape climate policy moving forward. This series is a critical part of our mission to get the latest science to decision-makers in an accessible format to help accelerate transitions to sustainability, Wendy Broadgate, Global Hub Director in Sweden for Future Earth, one of the three research consortiums behind the report, said in a statement.
Beyond being essential for policymakers, these discoveries can also help inform how us everyday folks should be thinking about and reacting to climate change. Check out the complete list here, and sift through takeaways from the top five findings below:
As physicians, we are tasked with addressing the downstream effects of dangerous trends in society, such as the use of tobacco or the worsening quality of our air. One physician pushing back against this status quo is Heather Zar, M.D., Ph.D., a doctor on the faculty at the Red Cross Children s Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa, who through innovative research is bridging not only the wide gap between public policy and the role of doctors but also the gaps between rich and poor and between developed and developing countries.
The Drakenstein Child Health Study, which began in 2012, is Zar s latest and most ambitious undertaking and aims to shine a bright spotlight on what pollution is doing not only to our lungs but to our brains, to our immune systems, and even to the bacteria that colonize us.