NASA, Partners Offer Numerous Resources to Monitor Climate Change

By  //  July 23, 2023

NASA & SPACE NEWS

Dr. Kate Calvin, pictured here at the Earth Information Center ribbon cutting in June, addressed members of the media along with other NASA leadership and climate experts on July 20, 2023.
In light of recent extreme weather events in the United States and around the world, NASA held a media roundtable on July 20 from its headquarters in Washington to highlight the agency’s climate work. (NASA image)

(NASA) – In light of recent extreme weather events in the United States and around the world, NASA held a media roundtable on July 20 from its headquarters in Washington to highlight the agency’s climate work.

From wildfires raging across North America, flooding in the Northeast, heatwaves across the Southwest, and a record hot June, millions of Americans are experiencing the effects of extreme weather. NASA is tracking it all, and sharing its data.

“The data is clear: Our Earth is warming. And NASA is committed to empowering scientists, decisionmakers, and people around the world to make data-based decisions when it comes to climate, said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson.

“With more than two dozen satellites, instruments aboard the International Space Station, and commercial and international partnerships, NASA uses our unique vantage point of space to observe our planet. To put it another way, NASA is bringing space down to Earth.”

Other NASA experts participating in the discussion were:

■ Kate Calvin, NASA chief scientist and senior climate adviser

■ Karen St. Germain, director, NASA’s Earth Science Division

■ Gavin Schmidt, director, NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies

■ Tom Wagner, associate director for Earth Action

■ Huy Tran, aeronautics director, NASA’s Ames Research Center

■ Carlos Del Castillo, chief, Ocean Ecology Laboratory, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

The topics of discussion ranged from greenhouse gases, NASA’s new Earth Information Center, the fleet of satellites the agency has observing weather-data, how NASA uses surface records to learn more about climate change, how climate change affects oceans, and more.

“NASA’s vast, decades-long array of Earth, atmospheric, and solar data – which are openly and freely available to anyone – provide a comprehensive, real-time history of our dynamic and complex planet. Understanding Earth gives us the means to better protect it,” said Calvin.

Audio of the full briefing is available on NASA’s Youtube channel. NASA also offers a variety of resources across its websites including:

NASA GISS Resources
■ GISTEMP Global Temperature Record
■ ModelE Climate Model
■ Climate Impacts

Agency Resources
■ Climate.NASA.gov
■ Agency Climate Strategy Overview
■ NASA Español
■ JPL Center for Climate Sciences
■ GSFC Global Modeling and Assimilation Office
■ Langley Research Center
■ Ames NASA Earth Exchange

Visualization Resources
■ NASA Science Visualization Studio
■ NASA Earth Observatory

Social Media Resources
■ NASAEarth
■ NASAClimate

Climate Explainer Resources
Temperature Record 101: How We Know What We Know about Climate Change
The Climate Events of 2020 Show How Excess Heat is Expressed on Earth

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