Veronika Huber
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
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Featured researches published by Veronika Huber.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Lila Warszawski; Katja Frieler; Veronika Huber; Franziska Piontek; Olivia Serdeczny; Jacob Schewe
The Inter-Sectoral Impact Model Intercomparison Project offers a framework to compare climate impact projections in different sectors and at different scales. Consistent climate and socio-economic input data provide the basis for a cross-sectoral integration of impact projections. The project is designed to enable quantitative synthesis of climate change impacts at different levels of global warming. This report briefly outlines the objectives and framework of the first, fast-tracked phase of Inter-Sectoral Impact Model Intercomparison Project, based on global impact models, and provides an overview of the participating models, input data, and scenario set-up.
The Lancet Planetary Health | 2017
Antonio Gasparrini; Yuming Guo; Francesco Sera; Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera; Veronika Huber; Shilu Tong; Micheline de Sousa Zanotti Stagliorio Coelho; Paulo Hilário Nascimento Saldiva; Eric Lavigne; Patricia Matus Correa; Nicolas Valdes Ortega; Haidong Kan; Samuel Osorio; Jan Kyselý; Aleš Urban; Jouni J. K. Jaakkola; Niilo R. I. Ryti; Mathilde Pascal; Patrick Goodman; Ariana Zeka; Paola Michelozzi; Matteo Scortichini; Masahiro Hashizume; Yasushi Honda; Magali Hurtado-Diaz; Julio Cruz; Xerxes Seposo; Ho Kim; Aurelio Tobías; Carmen Iñiguez
Summary Background Climate change can directly affect human health by varying exposure to non-optimal outdoor temperature. However, evidence on this direct impact at a global scale is limited, mainly due to issues in modelling and projecting complex and highly heterogeneous epidemiological relationships across different populations and climates. Methods We collected observed daily time series of mean temperature and mortality counts for all causes or non-external causes only, in periods ranging from Jan 1, 1984, to Dec 31, 2015, from various locations across the globe through the Multi-Country Multi-City Collaborative Research Network. We estimated temperature–mortality relationships through a two-stage time series design. We generated current and future daily mean temperature series under four scenarios of climate change, determined by varying trajectories of greenhouse gas emissions, using five general circulation models. We projected excess mortality for cold and heat and their net change in 1990–2099 under each scenario of climate change, assuming no adaptation or population changes. Findings Our dataset comprised 451 locations in 23 countries across nine regions of the world, including 85 879 895 deaths. Results indicate, on average, a net increase in temperature-related excess mortality under high-emission scenarios, although with important geographical differences. In temperate areas such as northern Europe, east Asia, and Australia, the less intense warming and large decrease in cold-related excess would induce a null or marginally negative net effect, with the net change in 2090–99 compared with 2010–19 ranging from −1·2% (empirical 95% CI −3·6 to 1·4) in Australia to −0·1% (−2·1 to 1·6) in east Asia under the highest emission scenario, although the decreasing trends would reverse during the course of the century. Conversely, warmer regions, such as the central and southern parts of America or Europe, and especially southeast Asia, would experience a sharp surge in heat-related impacts and extremely large net increases, with the net change at the end of the century ranging from 3·0% (−3·0 to 9·3) in Central America to 12·7% (−4·7 to 28·1) in southeast Asia under the highest emission scenario. Most of the health effects directly due to temperature increase could be avoided under scenarios involving mitigation strategies to limit emissions and further warming of the planet. Interpretation This study shows the negative health impacts of climate change that, under high-emission scenarios, would disproportionately affect warmer and poorer regions of the world. Comparison with lower emission scenarios emphasises the importance of mitigation policies for limiting global warming and reducing the associated health risks. Funding UK Medical Research Council.
Environmental Research Letters | 2014
Veronika Huber; Ina Neher; Benjamin Leon Bodirsky; Kathrin Höfner; Hans Joachim Schellnhuber
Globally, the further expansion of cropland is limited by the availability of adequate land and by the necessity to spare land for nature conservation and carbon sequestration. Analyzing the causes of past land-use changes can help to better understand the potential drivers of land scarcities of the future. Using the FAOSTAT database, we quantify the contribution of four major factors, namely human population growth, rising per-capita caloric consumption (including food intake and household waste), processing losses (including conversion of vegetal into animal products and non-food use of crops), and yield gains, to cropland expansion rates of the past (1961–2007). We employ a Kaya-type decomposition method that we have adapted to be applicable to drivers of cropland expansion at global and national level. Our results indicate that, all else equal, without the yield gains observed globally since 1961, additional land of the size of Australia would have been put under the plough by 2007. Under this scenario the planetary boundary on global cropland use would have already been transgressed today. By contrast, without rising per-capita caloric consumption and population growth since 1961, an area as large as nearly half and all of Australia could have been spared, respectively. Yield gains, with strongest contributions from maize, wheat and rice, have approximately offset the increasing demand of a growing world population. Analyses at the national scale reveal different modes of land-use transitions dependent on development stage, dietary standards, and international trade intensity of the countries. Despite some well-acknowledged caveats regarding the non-independence of decomposition factors, these results contribute to the empirical ranking of different drivers needed to set research priorities and prepare well-informed projections of land-use change until 2050 and beyond.
Biogeosciences | 2012
T. Schneider von Deimling; Malte Meinshausen; Anders Levermann; Veronika Huber; Katja Frieler; David M. Lawrence; Victor Brovkin
Oecologia | 2012
Veronika Huber; Carola Wagner; Dieter Gerten; Rita Adrian
Biogeosciences Discussions | 2011
T. Schneider von Deimling; Malte Meinshausen; Anders Levermann; Veronika Huber; Katja Frieler; David M. Lawrence; Victor Brovkin
Ecological Modelling | 2014
Boris Sakschewski; Werner von Bloh; Veronika Huber; Christoph Müller; Alberte Bondeau
Earth System Dynamics Discussions | 2015
Katja Frieler; Anders Levermann; Joshua Elliott; Jens Heinke; Almut Arneth; Marc F. P. Bierkens; P. Ciais; Douglas B. Clark; Delphine Deryng; Petra Döll; P. D. Falloon; B M Fekete; Christian Folberth; Andrew D. Friend; C. Gellhorn; Simon N. Gosling; Ingjerd Haddeland; Nikolay Khabarov; Mark R. Lomas; Yoshimitsu Masaki; Kazuya Nishina; Kathleen Neumann; Taikan Oki; Ryan Pavlick; Alex C. Ruane; Erwin Schmid; Christoph Schmitz; Tobias Stacke; Elke Stehfest; Qiuhong Tang
Geoscientific Model Development | 2016
Katja Frieler; Stefan Lange; Franziska Piontek; Christopher Reyer; Jacob Schewe; Lila Warszawski; Fang Zhao; L P Chini; Sebastien Denvil; Kerry Emanuel; Tobias Geiger; Kate Halladay; George C. Hurtt; Matthias Mengel; Daisuke Murakami; Sebastian Ostberg; Alexander Popp; Riccardo E. M. Riva; Miodrag Stevanovic; Tatsuo Suzuki; Jan Volkholz; Eleanor J. Burke; Philippe Ciais; Kristie L. Ebi; Tyler D. Eddy; Joshua Elliott; Eric D. Galbraith; Simon N. Gosling; Fred Hattermann; Thomas Hickler
Marine Biology | 2012
Rita Adrian; Dieter Gerten; Veronika Huber; Carola Wagner; Silke R. Schmidt