Skip navigation
The Australian National University

climate change

National Adaptation Conference 2013

Event type: 
Date and Time: 
24 June 2013 - 5:00am - 27 June 2013 - 5:00am

Location

Hilton Hotel Sydney, NSW
Australia

Description

The conference will be the nexus between the research community and the users of climate change adaptation information in Australia. Building on the success of the NCCARF-CSIRO Climate Adaptation in Action 2012 Conference, the successful delivery of $27 million in adaptation research and the building of formal research networks and informal adaptation partnerships, this will be Australia’s pre-eminent event focusing solely on climate change adaptation for 2013.

Tony Windsor MP at the National Press Club - 27th May

Event type: 
Date and Time: 
27 May 2011 - 11:45am

Location

National Press Club Canberra, ACT 2600
Australia

Description

Activist group GetUp is hosting independent MP Tony Windsor at the National Press Club, as he talks climate change, the Murray Darling, regional engagement and the federal budget. 

When: 11.45am-1.30pm, Friday, 27 May 
Where: The National Press Club, Canberra 

'River stories: cultures and politics of waterways in an era of climate change',

This is a call for papers for a session at the Institute of Australian Geographers annual conference, University of Wollongong, 3rd-6th July 2011.

The 2nd Asia-Pacific STS Network Conference 19-21 July 2011, Shenyang China

Abstracts and papers are invited according to the conference theme: STS and the new knowledge society: negotiating innovation, risk, trust, culture & development - Deadline:  1 April 2011.

Outlook 2011

Event type: 
Date and Time: 
1 March 2011 (All day) - 2 March 2011 (All day)

RSVP information

Location

Canberra's National Convention Centre Canberra
Australia

Description

With leading international and national speakers the Outlook 2011 conference will explore the key issues for Australia's agriculture, fisheries, foresty and natural resource sectors. Sessions include: an economic overview, farm performance, agriculture and technology, food security and trade, climate change, live animal exports, biosecurity, farm chemical management and key commodities.

The 17th International Symposium on Society and Resource Management (ISSRM)

Event type: 
Date and Time: 
13 May 2011 (All day) - 17 May 2011 (All day)

Location

Grand Borneo Hotel, Kota, Kinabalu., SB
Malaysia

Description

The theme for the Malyasian Borneo ISSRM is Natural Resource Development and Conservation: Negotiating Boundaries Knowledge and Power. Sub themes include
 
·        Energy exploration and production
·        Agrarian change and social transformation
·        Commodification: forests, land, sea and labour and culture
·        Climate change, science and politics
·        Conservation and social movement
·        Science, religion and natural resources
·        Regionalism, urbanism and nature
·        Environment and the colonial experience
·        Water, energy mining and waste
 
The due date for abstracts, panel and coordinated session proposals is 25 February 2011. For further information please contact Dr Gaim James Lunkapis at gaim.ums@gmail.com .

Riding the waves of drought to climate change.

Please email me at maggies90@bigpond.com for a copy of the full text.  There is an accompanying power point that illustrates what is being said, so in effect the presentation is two fold.
I have also presented this paper to the Councillors of the City of Greater Shepparton (Nov. 2009) and was invited to deliver this presentation to the Executive Committee of the National Council for Women, Melbourne (2010) and at La Trobe University's Academic Seminar Series, Shepparton Campus (2010).

Other Research Themes

Congues, JM.  2009.  Riding the waves of drought to climate change.. Understanding rural landholders attitudes to climate change.

NIRRA-CCI Public Lecture, 'Climate Change 2010: Where do we go from here?'

Event type: 
Date and Time: 
10 March 2010 - 5:30pm - 7:00pm

Location

Shine Dome
Gordon Street
Canberra, ACT 2600
Australia

Description

 

 

Over the past few months, the climate change challenge has taken some odd twists and turns. The COP15 meeting in Copenhagen was widely condemned in the press as a failure; the Australian Government has been unable to get its emission trading scheme through the Senate; Europe and North America have been hit by cold and snowy winters; and there has been a surge in public attacks on the veracity of climate change science. What is going on? This talk will focus on the post-Copenhagen climate – both physical and political - examining what the credible science is really saying about the state of the climate system, and what might be in store for us in the coming decades, including the prospects for rural and regional Australia. Looking beyond the stories in the popular media about what was not achieved at COP15 the progress that actually was made in Copenhagen will be explored. With the recent surge in sceptic attacks on climate science this talk will also examine why the climate change challenge has suddenly become so much more difficult.

Speaker Bio

Professor Will Steffen is Executive Director of the ANU Climate Change Institute at The Australian National University and is also Science Adviser to the Australian Government’s Department of Climate Change. From 1998 to mid-2004 he served as Executive Director of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, based in Stockholm, Sweden. His research interests span a broad range within the fields of climate change and Earth System science, with an emphasis on incorporation of human processes in Earth System modelling and analysis; and on sustainability, climate change and the Earth System.

about this site Updated: 22 May 2013/ Responsible Officer:  Director, NIRRA / Page Contact:  Web Publisher