Filter By:

Journal Check one or more journals to show results from those journals only.

Choose more journals

Article type Check one or more article types to show results from those article types only.
Subject Check one or more subjects to show results from those subjects only.
Date Choose a date option to show results from those dates only.

Custom date range

Clear all filters
Sort by:
Showing 1–14 of 14 results
Advanced filters: Author: Katharine Ricke Clear advanced filters
  • Oceans provide essential ecosystem services to human society, yet the climate impacts on blue capital have long been ignored. Incorporating the latest works on ocean science and economics, researchers show that accounting for the potential damage would almost double the social cost of carbon estimation.

    • Bernardo A. Bastien-Olvera
    • Octavio Aburto-Oropeza
    • Katharine Ricke
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    P: 1-8
  • Global estimates of the economic impacts of CO2 emissions may obscure regional heterogeneities. A modular framework for estimating the country-level social cost of carbon shows consistently unequal country-level costs.

    • Katharine Ricke
    • Laurent Drouet
    • Massimo Tavoni
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 8, P: 895-900
  • A study has revealed that eliminating extreme poverty would result in a relatively small increase in global greenhouse-gas emissions, dispelling the idea that efforts to combat climate change and poverty are incompatible.

    • Katharine L. Ricke
    • Gordon C. McCord
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 623, P: 924-925
  • Modelling studies suggest that management of solar radiation could produce stabilized global temperatures and reduced global precipitation. An analysis of a large-ensemble simulation of 54 temperature-stabilization scenarios suggests that it may not be possible to achieve climate stabilization through management of solar radiation simultaneously in all regions.

    • Katharine L. Ricke
    • M. Granger Morgan
    • Myles R. Allen
    Research
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 3, P: 537-541
  • Perturbed-physics climate modelling experiments simulate past and future climate scenarios using a wide combination of model parameters consistent with past climate. Using such an approach, a study examines variations in the response of climate to solar-radiation management under different climate sensitivities.

    • Katharine L. Ricke
    • Daniel J. Rowlands
    • M. Granger Morgan
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 2, P: 92-96
  • Regional marine cloud brightening (MCB) has been proposed as a form of geoengineering. Here the authors show that a regional MCB aiming to reduce warming in the Western United States under today’s conditions would be less efficient under warmer conditions and would exaggerate warming in other regions.

    • Jessica S. Wan
    • Chih-Chieh Jack Chen
    • Katharine Ricke
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 14, P: 808-814
  • Minority groups are often disproportionately exposed to air pollution, but what drives these disparities is difficult to analyse. Using the economic shutdown associated with the 2020 COVID-19 shelter-in-place orders, this study estimates pollution exposure disparities caused by the in-person economy in California.

    • Richard Bluhm
    • Pascal Polonik
    • Jennifer A. Burney
    Research
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 5, P: 509-517
  • Exploring the heterogeneity in impacts and outcomes of using solar geoengineering to counteract global warming is important. Here the authors found that solar geoengineering that reduces temperature below present-day would grow GDP by accelerating economic development in tropics, but projections for global GDP-per-capita by the end of the century are highly dispersed and model dependent.

    • Anthony R. Harding
    • Katharine Ricke
    • Juan Moreno-Cruz
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-9
  • Some climate change impacts rise fast with little warming, and then taper off. To avoid diminishing incentives to reduce emissions and inadvertently slipping into a lower-welfare world, mitigation policy needs to be ambitious early on.

    • Katharine L. Ricke
    • Juan B. Moreno-Cruz
    • Ken Caldeira
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 9, P: 5-6
  • A manipulative experiment in which a reef is alkalinized in situ shows that calcification rates are likely to be lower already than they were in pre-industrial times because of acidification.

    • Rebecca Albright
    • Lilian Caldeira
    • Ken Caldeira
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 531, P: 362-365