Carbon Brief

Carbon Brief is a UK-based website[2][3] designed to "improve the understanding of climate change, both in terms of the science and the policy response". Leo Hickman is the director and editor for Carbon Brief.[4] Carbon Brief's climate-and-energy coverage is often cited by news outlets, or climate related websites, i.e. YALE Climate Communications highlighted a summary of climate model projections,[5] a 2011 The Guardian article quoted then-editor Christian Hunt,[6] in 2017 The New York Times cited climate scientist Zeke Hausfather,[7] or in 2018 MIT Technology Review cited an analysis on emissions scenarios.[8]

Carbon Brief
Type of site
Climate and energy
Available inEnglish
URLwww.carbonbrief.org
LaunchedDecember 6, 2010 (2010-12-06)[1]
Current statusActive

Founding

Carbon Brief is funded by the European Climate Foundation, and has their office located in London. The website was established in response to the Climategate controversy.[9]

Reception

The New York Times climate team's newsletter in May 2018 highlighted a CarbonBrief article about solar climate engineering, as insightful.[10]

Awards

The Royal Statistical Society gave Carbon Brief a Highly Commended award for investigative journalism in 2018, for the in 2017 published article, Mapped: How UK foreign aid is spent on climate change, authored by Leo Hickman and Rosamund Pearce.[11] In 2017, Carbon Brief won The Drum Online Media Award for "Best Specialist Site for Journalism".[12]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.