| Scientists
Asked to Create Earth Systems Research Plan
Scientists around
the world are being challenged to find the most pressing research
questions linked to global environmental change in the next
decade.
Everyone is invited to participate in
the online research project, particularly researchers early
in their careers and those with an interest in Earth sciences
and the environment.
The consultation, which is run by the
France-based International Council for Science (ICSU) in cooperation
with the International Social Science Council, has a closing
date of 15 August.
Participants in the 'Earth System Visioning'
project are asked to identify the most important research
questions and vote on the contributions of others in a bid
to shape the research agenda in Earth systems research.
The most pressing research questions today
are quite different to those that guided Earth sciences in
the past few decades, such as determining trends in natural
and human-induced climate change, and exploring how those
changes will affect both Earth systems and human well-being,
says ICSU.
We now need to understand the complex
relationships between different Earth systems such
as the relationship between the climate and social systems
and must mitigate and adapt to climate change, say
Walter Reid, Catherine Bréchignac and Yuan Tseh Lee
of ICSU in an editorial in Science.
ICSU hopes to harness the potential of
communication technologies to use "the widest possible
net" to capture the opinion of geographically-dispersed
scientists across a wide range of disciplines, they add. It
wants as many people as possible to help shape the relevance
of the outcomes, so the results belong to the broader international
community.
"We want a well-rounded global perspective
from across the breadth of science. We are also encouraging
early-career researchers to participate they will play
an important role in shaping Earth systems research over the
coming decades," Reid told SciDev.Net.
Leah Goldfarb, science officer for environment
and sustainable development at ICSU, says the month-long online
consultation is a new research model for ICSU and is the first
part of a three-step programme aimed at creating a coordinated
response to global environmental change and human well-being.
At a workshop in September or October,
the results from the online consultation the questions
and their relative ranking will be synthesised into
a draft research strategy, which will be open to comment on
the ICSU website. The workshop will involve 16 early-career
scientists and several leading global-change researchers.
A further meeting will be held around
May 2010 to finalise the document and a final research strategy
proposal is expected to be completed later in the year. "With
those research priorities in hand, the May 2010 meeting will
seek to determine how the global-change research programs
should go about answering the questions," says Reid.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 28 July 2009

|