Who Has The Most Historical Responsibility for Climate Change?
Article published by the New York Times
Johan Rockström: ‘We need bankers as well as activists… we have 10 years to cut emissions by half’
Article published in The Guardian
Global Carbon Atlas
The Global Carbon Project is a scientific program that aims to draw a complete picture of the carbon cycle on planet Earth.
How the Keeling Curve will need to bend to limit global warming to 1.5C
Guest post featured on Carbon Brief
What a Piece of Work
A scene from the movie Hamlet (1996) that inspired the name for this Threshold episode
"What a Piece of Work is Man"
An original song from the Broadway musical, Hair, that inspired the name for this Threshold episode
An Ocean of Air: A Natural History of The Atmosphere
Book by Gabrielle Walker, referenced by Threshold guest Francina Dominguez in this episode
Global Temperature Change 1880-2021
The global temperature anomaly for every single month since 1880 updated to end of 2021
More than half of all CO2 emissions since 1751 emitted in the last 30 years
Research article on CO2 emissions published in Institute for European Environmental Policy
The net-zero transition: What it would cost, what it could bring
Report published in McKinsey Sustainability
A Degree of Concern: Why Global Temperatures Matter
Feature piece by Alan Buis, published on NASA's Global Climate Change Website
Yale Climate Opinion Maps 2021
Map and researched published by Yale Program on Climate Change Communication
The Paris Agreement
The Paris Agreement, often referred to as the Paris Accords or the Paris Climate Accords, is an international treaty on climate change, adopted in 2015.
Guest post: Hundreds of planned coal mines ‘incompatible with 1.5C target’
Post by Dr. Ryan Driskell Tate and published by Carbon Brief
The Power Grid: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
John Oliver discusses the current state of the nation’s power grid, why it needs fixing, and, of course, how fun balloons are.
When cities were Nature’s haven: a tale from Bangalore
Article by Harini Nagendra published in The Conversation
Your Induction Stove Is the First Step Toward Plugging In the Whole House
An article by Ronda Kaysen in The New York Times
The net-zero transition: What it would cost, what it could bring
A report published by McKinsey Sustainability
This Nigerian architect wants to turn Africa’s water slums into floating cities
Article by Sibusiso Tshabalala in Quartz Africa
Indiana leads US in toxic releases per square mile, EPA report states
Article published in the Chicago Tribune
Plentiful renewable energy is opening up a new industrial frontier
Article published in The Economist
Home-grown Justice in a Legacy City
Article published by Threshold guest Karen Freeman-Wilson in Just City
Unequal Impact: The Deep Links Between Racism and Climate Change
Article published in Yale Environment 360
Plentiful renewable energy is opening up a new industrial frontier
Article published in The Economist
‘World’s first fossil-free steel’ produced in Sweden and delivered to Volvo
Article published in CNBC
SSAB to spend $4.75 bil to transform Nordic production to green steel by 2030
Article published in S&P Global
COP26 – what happened, and where next?
Article published in The Bartlett at University College London
Global Climate Agreements: Successes and Failures
Article published by the Council on Foreign Relations
How to Fight Climate “Delay”—Denial’s Hipper, More Dangerous Cousin
Article published in The New Republic
Geraldine Brooks Had an Unpleasant Surprise When She Taught at Harvard
Article published in The New York Times
What is COP27, and why does it matter?
Part one of a two-part collaboration with Threshold and Outrider
What’s at stake at COP27? Unpacking the issues at the climate conference in Egypt.
Collaboration with Threshold and Outrider. We dive into some of the big items on the agenda at COP27 and what’s at stake in negotiations about them.
Climate Makers and Takers
Podcast episode with Reveal. Our segment on Makoko and Eko starts at the beginning of the episode; our segment on COP27 starts at 36:52
U.K. Government Has Proposed A £600 Million Package To Help Its Steel Companies Go Green - But Is It Enough To Save The Floundering Steel Industry?