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Showing 1–15 of 15 results
Advanced filters: Author: Rob Bellamy Clear advanced filters
  • It is not clear how the public views the acceptability of bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS). Here the authors explored public perceptions of BECCS by situating the technology in three policy scenarios and found that the policy instrument used to incentivise BECCS significantly affects the degree of public support for the technology.

    • Rob Bellamy
    • Javier Lezaun
    • James Palmer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 10, P: 1-9
  • An analysis of 24,202 critical cases of COVID-19 identifies potentially druggable targets in inflammatory signalling (JAK1), monocyte–macrophage activation and endothelial permeability (PDE4A), immunometabolism (SLC2A5 and AK5), and host factors required for viral entry and replication (TMPRSS2 and RAB2A).

    • Erola Pairo-Castineira
    • Konrad Rawlik
    • J. Kenneth Baillie
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 617, P: 764-768
  • Framing solutions to climate change as natural strongly influences their acceptability, but what constitutes a ‘natural’ climate solution is selected, not self-evident. We suggest that the current, narrow formulation of natural climate solutions risks constraining what are thought of as desirable policy options.

    • Rob Bellamy
    • Shannon Osaka
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 10, P: 98-99
  • In the UK, there is a strong public preference for carbon dioxide removal in meeting national climate targets, but support is moderated by concerns about biochar, peatland restoration, and perennial biomass crops, according to an analysis that uses data from workshops and nationally-representative surveys.

    • Emily Cox
    • Laurie Waller
    • Rob Bellamy
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Earth & Environment
    Volume: 6, P: 1-10
  • Chilvers et al. present a systemic approach to participation that combines mapping diverse public engagements across a national energy system with a distributed deliberative mapping process involving citizens and specialists, which shows support for more distributed and inclusive energy system futures.

    • Jason Chilvers
    • Rob Bellamy
    • Tom Hargreaves
    Research
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 6, P: 250-259
  • Nation states need to incentivize negative emissions technologies if they are to take the decarbonization of whole energy systems seriously. This incentivization must account for public values and interests in relation to which technologies to incentivize, how they should be incentivized and how they should be governed once incentivized.

    • Rob Bellamy
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 3, P: 532-534
  • A global network of researchers was formed to investigate the role of human genetics in SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 severity; this paper reports 13 genome-wide significant loci and potentially actionable mechanisms in response to infection.

    • Mari E. K. Niemi
    • Juha Karjalainen
    • Chloe Donohue
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 600, P: 472-477
  • Scientists and policymakers must acknowledge that carbon dioxide removal can be small in scale and still be relevant for climate policy, that it will primarily emerge ‘bottom up’, and that different methods have different governance needs.

    • Rob Bellamy
    • Oliver Geden
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 12, P: 874-876
  • Whole-genome sequencing, transcriptome-wide association and fine-mapping analyses in over 7,000 individuals with critical COVID-19 are used to identify 16 independent variants that are associated with severe illness in COVID-19.

    • Athanasios Kousathanas
    • Erola Pairo-Castineira
    • J. Kenneth Baillie
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 607, P: 97-103
  • The publication of the IPCC Special Report on global warming of 1.5 oC paved the way for the rise of the political rhetoric of setting a fixed deadline for decisive actions on climate change. However, the dangers of such deadline rhetoric suggest the need for the IPCC to take responsibility for its report and openly challenge the credibility of such a deadline.

    • Shinichiro Asayama
    • Rob Bellamy
    • Mike Hulme
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 9, P: 570-572
  • The idea of planting trees to sequester carbon is so popular that it seems to make people feel more negative towards other techniques, when presented with a range of options for carbon removal. Such a bias could hamper development of a broad and socially-robust portfolio of carbon removal options.

    • Emily Cox
    • Sean Low
    • Rob Bellamy
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    Communications Earth & Environment
    Volume: 6, P: 1-5