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Monday, December 23, 2024

Women in climate change: Jessica Tierney

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During Woman's History Month, University of Arizona  News is spotlighting some of the many women on campus who are working  on climate change-related issues in various disciplines.

In a recent commentary published in Nature, world-renowned climate scientist and UArizona Regents Professor Diana Liverman and  her co-authors write that climate change will have disproportional  impacts on women, who in many societies have the responsibility to  provide food, water and child care but are more likely than men to lack  access to land, insurance and disaster relief. Liverman and her co-authors also write that women play crucial roles in climate change research, response and adaptation.

UArizona has a long legacy of women researching  climate change, and today there are outstanding women researchers  working on climate-related issues in nearly every college on campus,  from early career scientists to Regents and Distinguished Professors. 

"I'm so proud of the number of amazing women  working on climate issues at the University of Arizona," Liverman said.  "We cover a wide range of expertise – from climate science and  communication to policy and art. We are making a difference in what we  know and what we can do from the local to global."

Jessica Tierney joined the University of Arizona in 2015 and is an associate professor in the Department of Geosciences in the College of Science. She was a lead author on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Sixth Assessment Report's Working Group I report.

Q: What is the focus of your climate research?

A: My research focuses on  understanding climate change in the geological past, so that we can  better prepare for the future. Studying past climate change is  important, because humans have already raised carbon dioxide levels well  above anything seen in documented history, so our short observational  record of climate can't tell us what the Earth does when greenhouse  gasses are high. We have to go back over 2 million years to find the  last time that carbon dioxide levels were this high. Ancient warm  climates in particular are helpful, because by studying how the patterns  of ocean temperature and rainfall changed during these times, we can  better predict what might happen by the end of the century. But how do  we study these old climates? Obviously, we don't have a time machine, so  we have to rely on clues written in natural archives of climate change.  In my lab, we analyze the organic chemical properties of sediments  deposited in the deep ocean or in lake basins on land. We have  techniques that can tell us how hot or cold or how wet or dry it was. By  putting this information together with climate model simulations, we  can get a good view of how the Earth's climate behaved.

Q: What originally got you excited or worried about climate issues, and where do you think your work can make a difference?

A: I got into studying past  climates because of my interest in history, and how the study of the  past informs our social, political and economic behavior today.  Similarly, the Earth's history tells us how the climate system will  react in the upcoming decades. However, despite knowing how the Earth  can reconfigure itself in warm climates, I was shocked when, in summer  of 2021, we saw a series of extreme climate and weather events including  heat waves, megafires, record-breaking flood events and powerful  hurricanes. For the first time, I felt like, "Wow, this is really  happening!" The latest IPCC report has, for the first time, linked  extreme events like these to human-caused climate change. It got me  thinking about how little we know about extreme events in the past.  Because climate extremes happen over days, they are hard to reconstruct  from the geological record. However, there are some special archives  that capture ancient flood events, for example, and computational power  has gone up to the point where we can simulate ancient climates at  higher spatial and temporal resolution than ever before. I'm interested  in this challenge of understanding paleoweather, which would directly  connect to climate changes that are happening to people all around the  world, right now.

Q: What's one thing you want everyone to understand about climate change? 

A: I want to encourage  everyone to stay hopeful. Climate change is a huge challenge to address,  and it can be overwhelming to process that and also figure out where  you fit in. However, humans got us into this, and we can get ourselves  out of it as well. There is a lot of talk in the media about warming  levels, like 1.5 degrees Celsius for example, and many people are  worried about what happens if we pass those. It is important to know  that there isn't a single threshold out there beyond which there is no  point of return. Things get incrementally worse as you keep warming, but  we can stop at any time and avoid the worst case scenarios. The problem  ultimately has to be addressed at a community and government level, but  as an individual there are a lot of things you can do, like get  involved in local efforts to improve access to renewable energy – like  community solar projects – or public transportation. It's also important  to vote, so that candidates – from local to national – that have  climate change on their agenda are in positions of power. We definitely  have the technology to limit climate change, so I'm optimistic. Science  gives me hope.

Q: What advice do you have for young women or girls who may be interested in a career related to climate research or policy?

A: The great thing about  climate science is that it is everywhere and so interdisciplinary. You  can be a climate scientist in academia, industry, governmental offices,  tech startups and more. There are so many opportunities.

We clearly need more women and nonbinary  folks in climate science and policy across the board. Working on the  IPCC AR6 report, I was really struck by the fact that only about a  quarter of the authors were women. Although there were some prominent  women leading the working groups and chapters, the process is very much  dominated by men from Europe and North America. There are a lot of  voices missing and perspectives left out. We have to ask ourselves why  climate science has pushed people away and break down those barriers  where they exist. 

To aspiring women in climate sciences, I  would say built a support group of mentors, peers and friends who will  root for you and have your back when times get tough. Believe in  yourself and your science. We need you!

Original source can be found here.

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