90 episodes

Climate change is here; it's happening. Find out what that means, why scientists are so sure and what we need to do now.

Climate Change (Video‪)‬ UCTV

    • Science
    • 4.1 • 19 Ratings

Climate change is here; it's happening. Find out what that means, why scientists are so sure and what we need to do now.

    • video
    Hold Fast: Envisioning Climate Change through the Art and Science of our Local Giant Kelp Forests

    Hold Fast: Envisioning Climate Change through the Art and Science of our Local Giant Kelp Forests

    Southern California’s giant kelp forests are ecosystems that are potentially vulnerable to the region’s warming waters, but unlike terrestrial forests, changes in these underwater ecosystems are largely invisible to most of us. Join biologist Mohammad Sedarat and artist Oriana Poindexter in an exploration of their collaboration on the aquarium’s new art exhibition, Hold Fast, an immersive journey through our local giant kelp forests. Learn how their unique perspectives are combined to provide visitors with insight into climate change through the lens of art. Series: "Jeffrey B. Graham Perspectives on Ocean Science Lecture Series" [Science] [Show ID: 39556]

    • 47 min
    • video
    How to Get Big Oil to Take Climate Change Seriously

    How to Get Big Oil to Take Climate Change Seriously

    What role do oil companies have in tackling climate change? In this program, Paasha Mahdavi, Assistant Professor of Political Science at UC Santa Barbara, talks about the challenge of getting big oil to take climate change seriously. Mahdavi's research broadly explores comparative environmental politics and the political consequences of natural resource wealth. He is the author of Power Grab: Political Survival Through Extractive Resource Nationalization (Cambridge University Press, 2020), which shows how dictators maintain their grip on power by seizing control of oil, metals, and minerals production. Additional recent work includes the effects of oil-to-cash transfers on civic engagement; the political economy of fossil fuel subsidy reform; and the efficacy of policies to eliminate natural gas flaring. Series: "GRIT Talks" [Public Affairs] [Show ID: 39442]

    • 28 min
    • video
    Dodging Day Zero: Drought Adaptation And Inequality In Cape Town

    Dodging Day Zero: Drought Adaptation And Inequality In Cape Town

    In the coming decades, individuals around the world must adapt to changing environmental conditions, often driven by climate change. Adaptation requires significant resources, prompting the question of whether existing economic and social inequities may be exacerbated when adaptation become accessible to some, but not others. Kyle Meng, associate professor of economics at UC Santa Barbara, explores what happens when one of the world’s most unequal cities experiences an unprecedented, nearly catastrophic environmental disaster. In 2017, following years of prolonged drought, the city of Cape Town announced an impending "Day Zero", at which point pipes would run dry. Using a variety of data sources, we show how households of different wealth levels adapted to Day Zero and discuss the long term implications of Day Zero for Cape Town's water use and public finances. Series: "GRIT Talks" [Science] [Agriculture] [Show ID: 39334]

    • 29 min
    • video
    Developing Technology to Stay Ahead of Natural Disasters

    Developing Technology to Stay Ahead of Natural Disasters

    Increasingly destructive wildfires are one of the most consequential impacts of our changing climate, often precipitating a cascade of related disasters including landslides, debris flows, dangerous air pollution and degradation of water quality in our rivers, streams and reservoirs. Join geophysiscist Dr. Neal Driscoll as he describes how ALERTCalifornia is working to use camera systems, artificial intelligence and a variety of sophisticated remote sensing techniques to prepare, respond and recover from the ravages of wildfire on the environment. Series: "Jeffrey B. Graham Perspectives on Ocean Science Lecture Series" [Science] [Show ID: 39250]

    • 55 min
    • video
    How Mexican Ranchers Tackle Sustainability Issues in Beef Production

    How Mexican Ranchers Tackle Sustainability Issues in Beef Production

    UC Davis Professor, Dr. Frank Mitloehner, and CLEAR Center members took to Mexico to attend the Congress Internationale de la Carne in León, Guanajuato, Mexico, where they met and discussed sustainability efforts with the Minister of Agriculture. In addition to meeting with beef cattle producers and others in the livestock industry to share research coming from the UC Davis CLEAR Center, we got to tour feedlots and discuss sustainable practices that are currently being implemented. For example, rotational grazing can improve forage quality and soil carbon sequestration while implementing shade for cattle can improve efficiencies in production, and promote animal welfare. [Public Affairs] [Science] [Show ID: 39161]

    • 3 min
    • video
    Can UC Berkeley Go Geothermal?

    Can UC Berkeley Go Geothermal?

    UC Berkeley drills a 400-foot borehole to explore geothermal heating on campus.

    UC Berkeley plans to decommission its 40-year-old cogeneration plant and replace its current steam heating system with a new system that uses water pipes to heat and cool buildings on campus. While the cogeneration plant burns natural gas to produce electricity and steam heat for the campus, the new system will use electricity for both power and thermal needs. By using clean energy sources, such as wind and solar, to produce this electricity, the campus’s future power, heating and cooling needs would be entirely carbon-free.

    (Video: Roxanne Makasdjian, Alan Toth, Adam Lau) Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Public Affairs] [Science] [Show ID: 39224]

    • 5 min

Customer Reviews

4.1 out of 5
19 Ratings

19 Ratings

NELSONS' ,

Global Warming

For the deniers of this phenomenon, especially the ignoramus who mentioned the unusually cold winter & summer weather, just expand your understanding of how climate change actually causes the drastic changes in weather- worldwide. That would require just a little thinking. Even my 4th grade students understand this. You can’t deny facts.

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