Chinese glaciologist and climate scientist awarded the Volvo Environment Prize


The Chinese glaciologist and climate scientist Dr. Qin Dahe has been awarded
this year’s Volvo Environment Prize. The award winner is a key contributor to
the fifth assessment report from the UN climate panel (IPPC), whose first
section, the “Physical Science Basis”, was released in September. He attracted
wide attention last year with a report on how climate change leads to more
extreme weather events.
Dr Qin Dahe had a leading role in last year’s special report from IPCC on
extreme events and catastrophes. It was the first report to show scientifically
what many had already suspected, that extreme weather and climate phenomena have
become more frequent over the last 50 years. The findings gained wide currency
since they showed a clear connection between climate change and periods of
extreme conditions, such as extended droughts and heat waves, but also
torrential storms and rain in other regions. In its citation for this year’s
Volvo Environment Prize laureate, the Award Jury calls the report “a game
-changer”.

In the words of the Jury, “the report demonstrated for the first time a clear
link between climate change and many extreme events, an issue of immediate
relevance for human well-being in many parts of the world”.

Dr Qin is also a leading expert on cryosphere in central high Asia and its
importance. The cryosphere is one of the main components of the Earth’s climate
system, comprising snow, river and lake ice sea ice, glaciers, ice shelves, and
frozen ground. Especially, glaciers have important impacts on water resources
and ecosystems for more than two billion people in Asia.

Dr Qin has himself led several scientific expeditions to the Himalayas, and also
been on expeditions to the Antarctic.

-          There is no doubt that the major part of the glaciers in the
Himalayas is disappearing fast. But one of the research areas we will tackle is
the question of whether the Greenland ice cap is stable or not. And as well, the
risks for more extreme occurrences such as drought, floods and storms, says Dr
Qin.

Dr Qin Dahe hopes that the scientific evidence in the fifth assessment report
from the UN climate panel will be enough to lead to a breakthrough in global
climate negotiations.

-          There is an encouragingly fast development in climate models. We are
now seeing much smaller discrepancies between prognoses and what we observe in
the form of temperatures and carbon dioxide concentration. My hope is that the
scientific evidence will prompt people all over the world to work together to
reduce emissions, says Dr Qin.

Dr Qin Dahe is a glaciologist at the Cold and Arid Regions Environment and
Engineering Institute in Lanzhou, China, and Co-chair of Working Group 1, IPCC,
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He previously headed the China
Meteorological Administration. Dr. Qin has published more than 170 scientific
articles in English and 230 in Mandarin.

For more information about the Volvo Environment Prize and this year’s winner,
please contact the Chairman of Volvo Environment Prize jury Professor Will
Steffen, Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National
University, e-mail: will.steffen@anu.edu.au Phone: +61-447-980-495 or

The Chairman of the Volvo Environment Prize Scientific Committee, Professor Carl
Folke, Beijer Institute, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, e-mail:
carl.folke@beijer.kva.se Phone: + 46 8 673 95 00

The Volvo Environment Prize was founded in 1988 and has become one of the
world’s most prestigious environmental prizes. It is awarded annually to people
who have made outstanding scientific discoveries within the area of the
environment and sustainable development. The prize consists of a diploma, a
glass sculpture and a cash sum of SEK 1.5 million and is presented at a ceremony
in Stockholm on 26 November 2013.

For more information about the Volvo Environment Prize: www.environment
-prize.com

Pièces jointes

10210231.pdf