11 results match your criteria: "Foundation Euro- Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC)[Affiliation]"

Aims: Current dietary recommendations on fish consumption for cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention put somewhat vague emphasis on fatty fish, mainly driven by evidence on the cardioprotective effects of n-3 PUFAs. Recent data on the consumption of different types of fish in relation to hard cardiovascular endpoints suggests that fatty but not lean fish can contribute to CVD prevention. This considered, we aimed at evaluating, by an environmental perspective, fish consumption limited to the fatty type - in appropriate amounts for optimizing CVD prevention - within the European context.

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Background And Aims: Human and planetary health are inextricably interconnected through food systems. Food choices account for 50% of all deaths for cardiovascular diseases (CVD) - the leading cause of death in Europe - and food systems generate up to 37% of total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

Methods And Results: Based on a systematic revision of meta-analyses of prospective studies exploring the association between individual foods/food groups and the incidence of CVD, we identified a dietary pattern able to optimize CVD prevention.

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The Global Stocktake (GST), implemented by the Paris Agreement, requires rapid developments in the capabilities to quantify annual greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and removals consistently from the global to the national scale and improvements to national GHG inventories. In particular, new capabilities are needed for accurate attribution of sources and sinks and their trends to natural and anthropogenic processes. On the one hand, this is still a major challenge as national GHG inventories follow globally harmonized methodologies based on the guidelines established by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, but these can be implemented differently for individual countries.

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Multi-purpose crops as maize, rice, soybean, and wheat are key in the debate concerning food, land, water and energy security and sustainability. While strong evidence exists on the effects of climate variability on the production of these crops, so far multifaceted attributes of droughts-magnitude, frequency, duration, and timing-have been tackled mainly separately, for a limited part of the cropping season, or over small regions. Here, a more comprehensive assessment is provided on how droughts with their complex patterns-given by their compound attributes-are consistently related to negative impacts on crop yield on a global scale.

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Emerging reporting and verification needs under the Paris Agreement: How can the research community effectively contribute?

Environ Sci Policy

August 2021

Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement, (LSCE) CEA CNRS UVSQ UPSACLAY, 91191, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.

Greenhouse gas (GHG) emission inventories represent the link between national and international political actions on climate change, and climate and environmental sciences. Inventory agencies need to include, in national GHG inventories, emission and removal estimates based on scientific data following specific reporting guidance under the United Nation Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Paris Agreement, using the methodologies defined in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Guidelines. Often however, research communities and inventory agencies have approached the problem of climate change from different angles and by using terminologies, metrics, rules and approaches that do not always match.

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Future energy demand is likely to increase due to climate change, but the magnitude depends on many interacting sources of uncertainty. We combine econometrically estimated responses of energy use to income, hot and cold days with future projections of spatial population and national income under five socioeconomic scenarios and temperature increases around 2050 for two emission scenarios simulated by 21 Earth System Models (ESMs). Here we show that, across 210 realizations of socioeconomic and climate scenarios, vigorous (moderate) warming increases global climate-exposed energy demand before adaptation around 2050 by 25-58% (11-27%), on top of a factor 1.

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Article Synopsis
  • Forest carbon use efficiency (CUE) is how well forests use photosynthesis without wasting it on plant breathing; it's important for climate change studies but often overlooked.
  • The study looks at how thinning trees affects carbon in three types of European forests, especially as climate change warms the planet and increases CO2 in the air.
  • The results suggest that thinning can help forests store more carbon and stay healthy for longer, making it a good strategy to fight climate change.
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Corrigendum to "Soil organic carbon pool's contribution to climate change mitigation on marginal land of a Mediterranean montane area in Italy" <[J. Environ. Manag. 218 (2018) 593-601]>.

J Environ Manage

August 2018

Department for Innovation in Biological, Agro-food and Forest Systems (DIBAF), University of Tuscia, Via San C. De Lellis snc, 01100, Viterbo, Italy; Foundation Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC), Viterbo, Italy; RUDN University, Moscow, Russia.

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Soil organic carbon pool's contribution to climate change mitigation on marginal land of a Mediterranean montane area in Italy.

J Environ Manage

July 2018

Department for Innovation in Biological, Agro-food and Forest Systems (DIBAF), University of Tuscia, Via San C. De Lellis snc, 01100, Viterbo, Italy; Foundation Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC), Viterbo, Italy; RUDN University, Moscow, Russia.

To evaluate the mitigation potential provided by the SOC pool, we investigated the impact of woody encroachment in the 0-30 cm depth of mineral soil across a natural succession from abandoned pastures and croplands to broadleaves forests on the central Apennine in Italy. In parallel, to assess the effect of the land use change (LUC) from cropland to pasture, a series of pastures established on former agricultural sites, abandoned at different time in the past, were also investigated. Our results show that woody encroachment on former pastures and croplands contributes largely to mitigate climate change, with an increase of the original SOC stock of 45% (40.

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Wildfire spread and behavior can be limited by fuel treatments, even if their effects can vary according to a number of factors including type, intensity, extension, and spatial arrangement. In this work, we simulated the response of key wildfire exposure metrics to variations in the percentage of treated area, treatment unit size, and spatial arrangement of fuel treatments under different wind intensities. The study was carried out in a fire-prone 625 km agro-pastoral area mostly covered by herbaceous fuels, and located in Northern Sardinia, Italy.

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Article Synopsis
  • Changes in climate can make forest conservation plans not work if we don’t think about how the environment will change in the future.
  • Our research looks at how common European forest species might be affected by climate change, especially in Southern Europe, by creating maps to show where these species will be able to live in the future.
  • We found that climate change will change where different types of forests can grow, with some areas becoming better for some trees, but worse for others, and overall, many types of trees may have a hard time surviving.
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