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Aline Soterroni, of the Brazilian National Institute
for Space Research (INPE), has visited IIASA twice – both
as part of its Young Scientists Summer Program and as
a research scholar. She helped develop the Brazilian
version of the IIASA Global Biosphere Management
Model (GLOBIOM) – a well-known model that simulates
the competition for land between agriculture,
bioenergy, and forestry.
Soterroni relished the creative atmosphere at IIASA
and says the Brazilian GLOBIOM adaptation was, uniquely,
led by the target country (by INPE and the Institute for
Applied Economic Research).
They have improved its baseline data and adapted
it to reflect the boom in soy farming, as well as soy’s
widespread no-tillage production system, which
reduces carbon emissions from the soil. They also
added forest restoration as a land use class, which is
essential for modeling Brazil’s changing Forest Code —
a law restricting deforestation by land-owners.
“It was impossible to
do it without IIASA, but
it was also important
that it was us, Brazilians,
identifying the major
research questions and
the scenarios that are
relevant to our region
and engaging with local
stakeholders,” she says. As well as helping, along with MESSAGE-Brazil, to
determine Brazil’s intended carbon emission reductions,
Soterroni’s group has used GLOBIOM-Brazil to show that
surging demand for ethanol, and thus for more sugar
cane plantations, could be reconciled with forest
conservation by intensifying cattle ranching to release
pasture for planting. The team has also analyzed what
would happen if the moratorium on converting Amazon
rainforest to soy plantations were extended to the
Cerrado biome, a tropical savannah and little-known
biodiversity hotspot that is rapidly being converted to
soy and pasturelands.
For Schaeffer, constant interaction with IIASA is critical.
“Most of the improvements that we have done in our
models are very much a function of having PhD students
spend some time at IIASA learning new approaches
and then being able to come back and incorporate or
develop those things into our own model,” he says.
For some of those students, the benefits have gone
beyond the scientific:
“The institute’s message really caught me,” says
Camila Ludovique Callegari, who was a doctorate
sandwich program fellow at IIASA. “To care about the
world, to make more with less resources – it really
inspired me in both my career and my personal life.”
participants of the
Young Scientists Summer
Program since 2010
research
partners publications have resulted from
collaborations between IIASA
and researchers at Brazilian
institutions since 2010
16
38 143
Areas of research collaboration
Further info: www.iiasa.ac.at/Brazil
Supporting Brazil’s
changing energy
landscape Projecting
demographic
change in Brazil
Co-benefits: Improving
air quality and tackling
climate change
Advancing the
modeling of
complex systems
Balancing the needs
of agriculture and the
environment in Brazil
By Aisling Irwin
The fellows are
exposed to a highly
internationalized and
interdisciplinary
environment that
enriches personal,
professional, and
cultural perspectives
Mauro Luiz Rabelo
IIASA Council member for Brazil 19OptionsWinter
2019/20
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band winter 2019"
options
Band winter 2019
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2019
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine