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Forecasting landslides:
Systems analysis
gives the bigger picture
Dalia Kirschbaum, YSSP’06 alumna, applies systems analysis
and citizen science to the study of landslides at NASA
Of all the natural disasters which
can sweep away life and property,
landslides are among the most
difficult to forecast. They result from
complex interactions between rainfall,
the land’s surface, and the soil structure.
However, the increasing availability of
remote‑sensing data is driving new research
into the development of more effective
landslide assessment systems.
Dalia Kirschbaum is a Young Scientists
Summer Program alumna who had
combined research into multiple hazards
with economics but soon found herself
focusing on landslides. “I felt there was an
opportunity to apply remote sensing data
to landslides in new and different ways,” says the scientist, who now works at NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Centre in the US.
At IIASA in 2006, Kirschbaum found
that systems analysis enabled her to look
at “the question of disasters, hazards, and
their impact from the economic perspective,
from the insurance perspective, from the
people who have to make decisions for
emergency response.”
At NASA Kirschbaum now applies her
IIASA experience to developing a web‑based
interface for visualizing landslide hazards.
She says the more complex the problem,
the greater the need for systems analysis.
“We’ve already seen how land use has
had an impact on landslides. The challenge
now is in seeing how landslide frequency, or even occurrence, is going to change.”
To fill in the data gaps, Kirschbaum plans
to leverage the expertise of researchers and
citizen scientists to create a global landslide
database. She says it’s about understanding
the bigger picture—”and that’s really what
I got out of my experience at IIASA.” KS
science.gsfc.nasa.gov/sed/bio/
dalia.b.kirschbaum
Climate change policies
could increase smog
YSSP’15 participant and Peccei award winner Carlijn Hendriks
explores the interlinkages between air pollution, bioenergy,
and climate change
The EU has ambitious plans for reducing
air pollution and climate change
by 2050. Yet while the policy plans
are separate, greenhouse gases and air
pollutants come from the same sources,
such as transportation and industry.
Air quality and climate change are also
linked at a far more basic level: chemistry.
The air pollutant ground‑level ozone,
for example, is of great concern because
of its detrimental impact on human health
and the environment. Ozone forms when
certain compounds released by plants
are oxidized in the presence of nitrogen
oxides, a type of pollutant released through
combustion. Projections for air pollution in 2050
show that ozone levels should decrease as
air pollution goes down. But the processes
that form ozone work faster at higher
temperatures, so as climate change leads
to hotter summers, ozone damage could
increase. Finally, climate policies to increase
bioenergy production could further add to
ozone damage through an increase in the
compounds that can be converted to ozone.
In new research, conducted as part of the
YSSP’15, Dutch PhD candidate CarlijnÂ
Hendriks
explored these complex interactions. Using
multiple models of economic markets,
greenhouse gas emissions, land‑use change,
and air chemistry transport, Hendriks found that the effect of a warming climate on
ozone production was the key factor, far
outweighing the reductions in ozone that
would come from current EU air quality policy
by 2050. The smallest effect came from
bioenergy production, which would cause
only a slight increase in ozone damage. KL
blog.iiasa.ac.at/hendriks-16
Dalia Kirschbaum
Carlijn Hendriks
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band summer 2016"
options
Band summer 2016
- Titel
- options
- Band
- summer 2016
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2016
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine