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2013/05/22

Nature Climate Change May issue: Fracking, geo-engineering and coastal vulnerability

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Nature Climate Change May issue

Shale gas and fracking is a highly debated topic in the media; in this issue it is discussed in a Market Watch focusing on the EU and lack of clear policy on this sensitive area. Another much discussed topic, geoengineering or more specifically solar radiation management, is the topic of a Perspective. Whilst the News Feature reports on what is happening in the US political arena with regards to climate change and what the re-election of Obama could mean.
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The vulnerability of coastal regions to climate change impacts is investigated. A Perspective investigates a global standard for monitoring wetland vulnerability to sea-level rise, whilst there are Letters on groundwater inundation of coastal plains as a consequence of sea-level rise and the impact of wind-waves on coastal regions.

We hope you enjoy the issue.



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Nature PastCast
Each month for the next year the PastCast will delve into Nature's archive to bring you the key papers and hidden gems from the back catalogue.

This month: May 1985. Jonathan Shanklin was sifting through a backlog of data when he made the startling discovery of a hole in the ozone layer above Antarctica. In this podcast, he and others recall the events in the mid-1980s and discuss how the 'ozone hole' became the poster child for environmentalism.


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