



Announcing the GHG Summer School 2016
- Details
- Written by Stephan Matthiesen
- Category: News
- Published: 23 February 2016
This year's International Summer School on Global Greenhouse Gases will be held at the National Oceanography Centre in Southampton on 2-12 August 2016. This intensive 10-day course is aimed at advanced PhD students and post-doctoral researchers in the natural sciences who want to develop a solid understanding of the role of key greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the Earth system and the processes that govern their dynamics in the atmosphere, ocean and biosphere. We now accept applications to the School - the deadline is 25 April 2016. More details and the application form are on the Summer School page.
"Mission: Climate Science" at Our Dynamic Earth, 18-21 Feb 2016
- Details
- Written by Stephan Matthiesen
- Category: News
- Published: 17 February 2016
Join the climate scientists from the Greenhouse Gas Programme at a public engagement drop-in event at Our Dynamic Earth daily from Thursday, 18 February, to Sunday, 21 February 2016.
Read more: "Mission: Climate Science" at Our Dynamic Earth, 18-21 Feb 2016
Greenhouse Gases at EGU 2016
- Details
- Written by Stephan Matthiesen
- Category: News
- Published: 02 December 2015

We invite contributions to our session at the General Assembly of the European Geosciences Union (EGU), 17-22 April 2016, on greenhouse gases on all scales and in all domains. The session with the title "Quantifying greenhouse gas fluxes on local, regional and global scales using atmosphere, ocean and biosphere measurements" particularly welcomes contributions that make connections across different domains, sub-disciplines and scales. The abstract deadline is 13 Jan 2016 (13.00 CET); abstracts can be submitted through the session page on the EGU website.
Video: Radiatively Active Gases from the North Atlantic Region and Climate Change (RAGNARoCC)
- Details
- Written by Stephan Matthiesen
- Category: Blog
- Published: 11 December 2015

How do we investigate the the amount and variability of sources and sinks of greenhouse gases from the North Atlantic? A new video introduces the project Radiatively Active Gases from the North Atlantic Region and Climate Change (RAGNARoCC), what it hopes to achieve with the gained data and how it will help increase our knowledge and understanding of climate change.
Engaging with school students and the public: "Mission: Climate Science"
- Details
- Written by Kay Douglas
- Category: Blog
- Published: 30 November 2015

The "Mission: Climate Science" was an event held at the Royal Botanic Garden on the weekend of 24 and 25 October. It involved climate scientists engaging with the general public through drop-in activities, exhibits and interactive performances based on the "Greenhouse Gases Emissions and Feedback Programme", the "Methane in the Arctic - Measurements and Modelling (MAMM)" project, and the "Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements (FAAM)", all of which are funded by NERC.
Read more: Engaging with school students and the public: "Mission: Climate Science"