Nathan Bindoff
IMAS, University of Tasmania, CSIRO Marine and atmospheric, TAS, Australia
Nathan Bindoff is Professor of Physical Oceanography at the University of Tasmania, and CSIRO Marine Research Laboratories, Climate Change and Ocean Processes program leader, Project Leader of the Antarctic Cooperative Research Centre’s Climate Futures Program and in the ARC Centre of Excellence in Climate System Science.
Nathan is a physical oceanographer, specializing in ocean climate and the earth’s climate system., with a focus on understanding the causes of change in the oceans. He was the coordinating lead author for the ocean chapter in the Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report and Fifth Assessment reports. Nathan and colleagues documented some of the first evidence for changes in the oceans in the Indian, North Pacific, South Pacific and Southern Ocean’s and the first evidence of changes in the Earths hydrological cycle from ocean salinity.
His most recent work is on documenting the decline in oxygen content of the oceans and lead the Climate Futures of Tasmania project that examined the consequences for climate change on Tasmania climate, agricultures, hydrology and extremes. He has also worked in the Antarctic, determined the total production of Adelie Land Bottom Water formation and its contribution Antarctic Bottom Water Formation and its circulation. He contributed to the Inter-Governmental Panel for Climate Change winning the Noble Peace Prize in 2007, shared with Al Gore, and is now a coordinating lead author of the Detection and Attribution chapter in the Fifth Assessment Report for the IPCC. He has published 85 peer reviewed papers and 42 reports.
Abstracts this author is a contributor to:
Getting executives to listen: How the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures can help your science have impact. (#104)
2:45 PM
Tomas A Remenyi
12(i). Regional climate modelling and its applications
Seasonal evolution of the surface layer heat balance in the subtropical Indian Ocean (#160)
11:45 AM
Ming Feng
35. Variability and dynamics of Indo-Pacific ocean exchange and roles in air-sea coupling