This video was produced by LSE to coincide with the publication of the IPCC’s Working Group II report on Climate Change... Read more

This video was produced by LSE to coincide with the publication of the IPCC’s Working Group II report on Climate Change... Read more
The following comments were made in response to the IPCC’s Working Group II report on Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, published today (28 February 2022) Read more
This article considers how the latest the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report on climate science could become a... Read more
In this opinion article Bob Ward reflects on the latest IPPC climate change report. He argues that although the report makes for grim reading there is hope if individuals, companies and governments take action on climate change. Read more
Professor Lord Nicholas Stern, Chair of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment and the ESRC Centre... Read more
Using an analysis of UK decision-makers managing and responding to heatwaves and flood risks, this paper argues how more robust local evidence is needed to inform decision-making regarding adaptation options for enhancing local resilience. Read more
A new paper published in Nature Climate Change shows that despite appearances to the contrary, the Nobel Prize-winning DICE ‘climate and economy’ model and the UN’s climate targets are in fact pulling in the same direction. Read more
Recent evidence shows that climate change is leading to irreversible and existential impacts on vulnerable communities and countries across the... Read more
Over the past few weeks, climate change deniers have launched waves of desperate attacks against Sir David Attenborough, using innuendo and false rumour to try to discredit his new programmes on climate change. Here Bob Ward sets out evidence that refutes these unfounded allegations. Read more
Climate change deniers in Britain are continuing to mislead the public and policy-makers by wrongly claiming that there has been... Read more