Theme: “Climate Change: Challenges & Sustainabilityâ€
Climate Change Conference 2023
ConferenceSeries cordially invite you to attend the “12th International Conference on Climate Change & Environmental Science” slated on May 25-26, 2023| London, UK. We welcome all scientists, scholars, students, industrialists to attend and explore their knowledge within the world of worldwide global climate change and earth science.
Conference Name |
Place |
Date |
London, UK |
October 02-03, 2023 |
Climate Change 2023 conference will specialize in the newest and exciting innovations altogether areas of global climate change and Earth Science which offers a singular opportunity for investigators across the globe to meet, network, and witness new challenges. This year’s annual congress highlights the theme, “Climate Change: Challenges & Sustainability” which reflects the Cutting-edge Information. The two days conference webinar includes workshops, symposiums, special keynote sessions conducted by eminent and renowned speakers. This Conference also encourages the active participation of young student researchers as we are hosting Poster Award Competition and Young research Forum at the virtual platform.
Benefits of attending Climate Change Conference:
- Build Strategic Business Connections
- Gain New Insights
- Collaborate with the leaders in the fields of Climate Change
- Networking events
- Strategy exchange sessions
- Specialty Exhibit Areas- Companies often have tools to display that we haven’t seen yet
- The focus and energy of Like-Minded Individuals
- The Serendipity of the Random Workshops
- Lightning Sessions
- Market Debut
Who should attend ?
- Climatologist
- Medical Entomologist
- Meteorologist
- Geologist
- Environmental researchers
- Hydrologist
- Marine biologist
- Oceanographer
- Ecologists
- Chemical researchers
- Environmental engineers
- Waste management researchers
- Business entrepreneur
- Astronomers
- Earth science association
- Sustainability Strategists
- CEO’s
- Young research forum
Why to attend ?
Climate Change 2023 conference will focus on the latest and exciting innovations in all areas of Climate Change and Medical Entomology which offers a unique opportunity for investigators across the globe to meet, network, and witness new challenges. This year’s annual congress highlights the theme, “Climate Change: Challenges & Sustainability” which reflects the Cutting-edge Information. The two days conference includes workshops, symposiums, special keynote sessions conducted by eminent and renowned speakers. This Conference also encourages the active participation of young student researchers as we are hosting Poster Award Competition and Young research Forum at the conference venue.
Targeted Audience
- Directors, Board Members, Presidents, Vice Presidents, Deans and Head of the Departments
- Climate Change Researchers, Scientists, Faculties, Students
- Environmental Science Associations and Societies
- Colleges
- Climatology Companies and Industries
- Natural disaster finding Devices Manufacturing Companies
- Laboratory Technicians
- Business Entrepreneurs and Industrialists
- Training Institutes
- Software Developing Companies
- Data Management Companies
Young Researchers Forum-Young Scientist Benefits
Young Research’s Awards at Climate Change 2023 for the Nomination: Young Researcher Forum - Outstanding Masters/Ph.D./Post Doctorate thesis work Presentation.
Young Scientist Benefits
- Our conferences provide best Platform for your research through oral presentations.
- Share the ideas with both eminent researchers and mentors.
- Young Scientist Award reorganization certificate and memento to the winners
- Young Scientists will get appropriate and timely information by this Forum.
- Platform for collaboration among young researchers for better development
- Award should motivate participants to strive to realize their full potential which could in turn be beneficial to the field as whole.
For Scientific Sessions please go through the link:
https://climatechange.earthscienceconferences.com/call-for-abstracts.php
For Abstract Submission please go through the link:
https://climatechange.earthscienceconferences.com/abstract-submission.php
Sessions of Climate Change and Earth Science
Track 1: Climate Change and Climatology
Climatology, branch of the atmospherically sciences involved each the outline of climate and also the analysis of the causes of climatically variations and changes and their sensible consequences. Meteorology includes the systematic and regional studies of atmospherically conditions i.e., weather and climate. Climate indices area unit large-scale weather patterns that area unit consistent and measurable. The goal of associate index is to combine sort of things into an outsized, generalized description of either air or ocean phenomena which can be accustomed track the worldwide climate system. According to the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on global climate change (IPCC), this scientific consensus of variations in solar activity plays a small role in climate change. Warming from increased levels of human-produced greenhouse gases is really repeatedly stronger than any effects thanks to recent variations in solar activity.
Track 2: Pollution & Its Effects on Climate
Pollution is that the presence of a waste within the atmosphere and is typically the results of human actions. Pollution includes a prejudices impact on the atmosphere. Animals, fish and alternative aquatic life, plants and humans all suffer if the pollution is not controlled. One in every of the simplest issues that the earth is facing nowadays is that of environmental pollution, increasing with each passing year and inflicting grave and irreparable harm to the planet. In some cases, air pollutants, and greenhouse gases contribute to Global climate change. Marine pollution happens once probably harmful, effects result from the entry into the ocean of all types of waste like chemicals, particles, industrial, agricultural, and residential waste, noise, or the unfold of invasive organisms. The discharge of greenhouse gases causes the ocean to become hotter and causes the marine climate to become unfriendly leading to harm the marine system and marine life.
Track 3: Environmental Toxicology
Environmental toxicology is an interdisciplinary field of science bothered with the study of the harmful effects of varied chemical, biological and physical agents on living organisms. Eco toxicology may be a sub discipline of environmental toxicology bothered with studying the harmful effects of toxicants at the population and ecosystem levels. Organisms are often exposed to distinct sorts of toxicants at any life cycle stage, a number of which are more sensitive than others. Toxicity can also vary with the food web of organism's placement. Bioaccumulation occurs when an organism cache toxicant in fatty tissues, which can eventually establish a trophic cascade and therefore the bio magnification of specific toxicants. The results of a chemical or other substance at various applications on various species.
Track 4: Endangered Species and Forestry
The jury remains out on whether a tree falling within the backwoods makes a sound, however it positively has an impact. That is particularly valid for imperiled and endemic species, which just make them remain region of suitable lebensraum left on Earth, almost like Madame Berthe's mouse lemur in Madagascar, the sky-blue toxic substance dash frog in Peru and Canada's challenging crane. New examination discovers the disturbing proof misfortune inside Alliance for Zero Extinction destinations of tree cover. From 2001 to 2013, AZE locales lost 3 million sections of land (1.2 million hectares) of tree cover. While this is often a moderately little measure of tree cover misfortune contrasted with worldwide midpoints, for species in AZE destinations, losing even a touch zone of tree cover can mean last chance.
Track 5: Risks of Climate Change
Global climate change has already had observable effects on the environment. Glaciers have shrunk, ice on rivers and lakes is ending earlier, plant and animal ranges have shifted, and trees are flowering sooner.
Effects that scientists had predicted within the past would result from global climate change are now occurring loss of sea ice, accelerated water level rise and longer, more intense heat waves. In each of our nine cases, the extent of physical climate risk increases by 2030 and further by 2050. Across our cases, we discover increases in socioeconomic impact of between roughly two and 20 times by 2050 versus today’s levels. We also find physical climate risks are increasing across our global country analysis whilst some countries find some benefits.
Track 6: Earth Science and Climate Change Policies
Earth science or geoscience includes all fields of science related to the planet Earth. This is often a branch of science managing the physical constitution of the planet and its atmosphere. Earth science is that the study of our planet’s physical characteristics, from earthquakes to raindrops, and floods to fossils. The numerous purposes of the world sciences are to acknowledge the present capabilities and therefore the past evolution of the world and to use this information, whereby acceptable, for the advantage of human race. Some earth scientists use their information of the planet to seek out and develop energy and natural resources. Others study the impact of act on Earth's environment, and elegance ways to guard the planet.
Track 7: Climate Hazards
Climatic hazards are agents of disaster in terms of what they'll do to human settlements or to the environment. Potentially hazardous atmospheric phenomena include tropical cyclones, thunderstorms, tornadoes, drought, rain, hail, snow, lightning, fog, wind, temperature extremes, pollution, and climatic change. Identification of hazardous events isn't easy, although certain criteria are usually present. They include property damage; economic loss, like loss of income or a halt in production; major disruption of social services, including communications failures; excessive strain on essential services such as police, fire, hospital, and public.
Track 8: Global Warming.
Most scientists agree that the world is actually experiencing increasing temperatures, and lots of believe that humans are enhancing this overall warming trend. The likely effects of worldwide warming won't be limited to at least one country or maybe one continent and can permeate almost every aspect of the environment and of life for all living things. Potential effects listed here are just a couple of these discussed within the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) 2007 report. Raising sea levels are the foremost common concern, taking place with a thermal expansion of the oceans a result of water molecules expanding in warmer temperatures, increased precipitation, and the melting of mountain glaciers. Because all bodies of water have varying shapes and ocean water tends to “swell” differently counting on its starting temperature. In the 20th century alone, sea levels rose 0.17 meters predictions for subsequent century range anywhere from 0.18 to 0.59 meters.
Track 9: Earth Science.
Earth sciences, the fields of study concerned with the solid Earth, its waters, and therefore the air that envelops it. Included are the geologic, hydrologic, and atmospheric sciences. The broad aim of the world sciences is to know these features and therefore the past evolution of Earth and to use this data, where appropriate, for the advantage of humankind. Thus, the essential concerns of the world scientist are to watch, describe, and classify all the features of the world, whether characteristic or not, to get hypotheses with which to explain their presence and their development, and to plan means of checking opposing ideas for his or her relative validity. In this way the foremost plausible, acceptable, and long-lasting ideas are developed.
Track 10: Climate Change & Biodiversity
Climate change plays a crucial role in the change of biodiversity of the planet. There is an ample evidence that climate change affects biodiversity. According to the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, global climate change is probably going to become one among the foremost significant drivers of biodiversity loss by the top of the century. Climate change is already forcing biodiversity to adapt either through shifting habitat, changing life cycles, or the event of latest physical traits. In the air, gases, for example, water vapor, carbon dioxide, ozone, and methane act like the glass top of a nursery by catching warmth and warming the planet.
Track 11: Health Consequences & Adaptability Development
There is near unanimous scientific consensus that greenhouse emissions generated by act will change Earth's climate. The recent (globally averaged) warming by 0·5°C is partly due to such anthropogenic emissions. Climate change will affect human health in many ways—mostly adversely. Here, we summarize the epidemiological evidence of how climate variations and trends affect various health outcomes. We assess the small evidence there's that recent heating has already affected some health outcomes.
Track 12: Regenerative Agriculture to Reverse Climate Change
A world during which neediness and imbalance are endemic will dependably be inclined to natural and different emergencies. Feasible improvement requires meeting the elemental needs of all and stretching bent all the prospect to satisfy their desires for a superior life. While organic agriculture focuses on sustainability, regenerative agriculture takes things further. By working with nature, regenerative agriculture can reverse global climate change by revitalizing ecosystems, increasing biodiversity and restoring soils degraded by industrial farming.
Track 13: Climate Change Challenges & Sustainability
Renewable energy sources replenish themselves naturally without being depleted in the earth; they include bioenergy, hydropower, geothermal energy, solar energy, wind energy and ocean (tide and wave) energy. Sustainable development has become the center of recent national policies, strategies, and development plans of many countries. The return-to-renewables will help mitigate climate change is an excellent way but needs to be sustainable in order to ensure a sustainable future and bequeath future generations to meet their energy needs.
Track 14: Greenhouse Gases
A greenhouse emission (sometimes abbreviated GHG) may be a gas that absorbs and emits energy within the thermal infrared range. Greenhouse gases cause the greenhouse effect on planets. The primary greenhouse gases in Earth's atmosphere are water vapors (H2O), CO2 (CO2), methane (CH4), laughing gas (N2O), and ozone (O₃). Without greenhouse gases, the typical temperature of surface would be about −18 °C (0 °F), instead of this average of 15 °C (59 °F). The atmospheres of Venus, Mars and Titan also contain greenhouse gases.
Track 15: Climate Change: Marine Life
Marine Species suffering from global climate change include plankton - which forms the idea of marine food chains - corals, fish, polar bears, walruses, seals, sea lions, penguins, and seabirds. The Intergovernmental Panel on global climate change predicts an extra rise of between 1.4°C and 5.8°C by the top of the century. Climate change could therefore rather be the knock-out punch for several species which are already under stress from overfishing and habitat loss. A study has shown that fish within the North Sea have moved further north or into deeper water in response to rising sea temperatures. Other species may lose their homes for other reasons. The distribution of penguin species within the Antarctic Peninsula region, for instance, is changing with reductions in sea ice thanks to heating.
Track 16: Waste Management.
The impact of climate change on waste management infrastructure is likely to become increasingly important and there are some threats which should not be ignored. Landfills have a significant long-lived pollution potential due to slow degradation of biodegradable content and insufficient flushing of leachate through the contained material. Current infrastructure may be vulnerable to flooding, with the incidence of more extreme weather events. The impacts need to be understood and measures put in place to ensure that resilience to such events is adequate.
There are also potential waste and public health impacts in the aftermath of extreme catastrophic events. The waste management sector was responsible for around 4 percent of UK greenhouse gas emissions in 2013, with methane being by far the most prominent gas (91 percent). The vast majority of these emissions are from landfill sites.
Track 17: Air pollution
Air Pollution continues to stay a public health concern despite various actions taken to regulate pollution. The problem becomes more complex thanks to multiplicity and complexity of air polluting source mix (e.g., industries, automobiles, generator sets, domestic fuel burning, roadside dusts, construction activities, etc.). The urgent needs during this theme are extensive data compilation, management and interpretation of the monitored air quality, development of grid-based emission inventory of the required pollutants (PM10, PM2.5, SO2, NOx, CO, benzene, metals and PAHs), meteorological and air quality modeling of these pollutants with prediction capabilities.
Track 18: Solar and Volcanic Activity.
Physical Climate models are unable to reproduce the rapid warming observed in recent decades when considering only variations in solar output and volcanic activity. As the Sun is that the Earth's primary energy source, changes in incoming sunlight directly affect the climate system. If solar variations were liable for the observed warming, warming of both the troposphere and therefore the stratosphere would be expected, but that has not been the case.
Explosive volcanic eruptions represent the most important natural forcing over the economic era. When the eruption is sufficiently strong (with Sulphur dioxide reaching the stratosphere) sunlight are often partially blocked for a few of years, with a temperature signal lasting about twice as long. In the industrial era, volcanic activity has had negligible impacts on global temperature trends.
Track 19: Climate Change Adaptation.
Adaptation is "the process of adjustment to current or expected changes in climate and its effects". As global climate change effects vary across regions, so do adaptation strategies. While some adaptation responses involve trade-offs, others bring synergies and co-benefits. Increased use of air con allows people to raised deal with heat, but also increases energy demand. Other samples of adaptation include improved coastline protection, better disaster management, and therefore the development of more resistant crops.
Adaptation is especially important in developing countries since they are predicted to bear the brunt of the effects of climate change. The capacity and potential for humans to adapt, called adaptive capacity, is unevenly distributed across different regions and populations, and developing countries generally have less. There are limits to adaptation and more severe global climate change requires more transformative adaptation, which may be prohibitively expensive.
Environmental Analysis is an interdisciplinary major that specialize in the interaction between human and non-human components of the biosphere. The major applies approaches within the social sciences, arts and humanities, and natural sciences to understanding and solving environmental problems. Climate change can significantly affect water systems and important infrastructure as precipitation patterns change in duration, frequency and site. GSI develops tools and methods to assess impacts of global climate change on surface water and groundwater resources and dam operations. Projects have included assessing accelerated erosion thanks to flooding from extreme rainfall events and water system reliability for an outsized metropolitan area under changing rainfall patterns. El Nino - Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is that the primary source of inter-annual variability in climate for the Southeast Asia region. Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) has also got a strong correlation to climate variability. There is growing awareness of the potential use of seasonal forecasting for medium-term planning and model analyses of decadal scale changes in climate variability. Such forecasting processes need historical climate data so as to conduct analyses. RIMES carries out extensive rainfall analysis over Asia and Africa with data from various sources like TRMM, GPCP, NCDC, and from National Meteorology Departments, to spot climate variability and its impacts. This area of labor is meant to know how and why climate varies. It involves developing modeling capability to estimate how the climate will change within the future, also as developing climate projections for both research and long-term planning.
Temperature
1. As more and more heat-trapping greenhouse gases are emitted; the atmosphere warms up.
2. This warmer air results in more water evaporating from our oceans, rivers, lakes, and land, and entering the atmosphere.
3. Warmer air also holds more water vapor, and water vapor itself traps heat.
4. The additional water vapor within the already warmer air retains even more heat, amplifying the initial warming.
5. Even more warming results in even more water evaporating, starting the cycle once again. And again, and again.
The disappearance of Arctic sea ice is quickly occupation the direction of an irreversible tipping point. Indeed, many researchers believe it’s a question less of if than when we will begin seeing sea ice-free summers in the Arctic.
“With current global emission rates of 35 to 40 billion metric plenty of CO2 annually, we may get our first glimpses of ice-free Septembers within the next 20 to 25 years, once we will have added another 800 billion metric tons to the atmosphere,” Scientific American explains. “Yet it does not stop there. Other months of the year will become ice-free with additional atmospheric CO2. For example, with another 1,800 billion metric plenty of CO2, the Arctic will likely haven't any ice from July through October.”
It’s worth noting that this assessment is taken from a piece of writing that begins by admitting
that “observed ice loss is usually happening faster than climate models have forecasted.”
Greenhouse Gases
Climate Change may be a result of a posh system of interactions of greenhouse gases (GHG), the ocean, land, ice, and clouds. Large global climate change models use several computers and solve several equations to predict the longer-term climate. The equations may include simple polynomials to partial differential equations. Because of the uptake mechanism of the land and ocean, greenhouse emission emissions can take a short time to affect the climate. The IPCC has published reports on how greenhouse emission emissions may affect the typical temperature of the troposphere and therefore the predictions show that by the top of the century, we can expect a temperature increase from 0.8 C to 5 C. In this article, i exploit rectilinear regression (LM), Quadratic Regression and Gaussian Process Regression (GPR) on monthly GHG data going back several years and check out to predict the temperature anomalies based on extrapolate action. The results are quite similar to the IPCC reports.
Virtual/Video Presentation
Virtual/Video Presentation
Get Global Networking from your Door Step!
Video is a King - To make your presentations more compelling, harness the power of the narrative with video.
Why Virtual/Video Presentation?
A professionally produced video will keep your audience more focused and engaged with the overall content; it will tell your story and will provoke emotional responses. Video presentation perfectly aligns with your goals as a presenter: you want an engaged audience to think about and act on the information you’re conveying.
It’s easy to improve the audience experience through video, which utilizes sight and sound to reel the audience in. A short video will give them better ideas of your vision or approach, and more efficiently, everyone benefits. You will communicate more with less.
Virtual/Video presentations are increasing interest in providing learners with actual presentations and video is demonstrated to be an expanding channel for presentation.
Video presentation is currently used by our 2000+ speakers (having VISA issues, schedule conflicts etc…) across the globe.
Video Presentation Opportunity: Unavailability to travel due to various issues such as time constraint and visa to enter the country. Video presentation is one best option to put across your research at a global platform. Having video played at the conference proceedings, would surely serve the purpose of online visibility for your research.
- No Travel Plan & Agreements
- No Visa Issues
- No Appointment to be cancelled
- No Break from the regular schedule
Benefits of opting Video Presentation:
- Speaker video presentation will be officially recognized
- One of the scientific committees will represent the presentation on behalf of speaker
- Session Chair suggestions and comments will be communicated after the conference
- Publication of Abstract in the Souvenir and International Journal with unique DOI
- Certification by the International Organizing Committee (IOCM)
- Conference Souvenir (Hardcopy) delivery to presenter address
Details for Video Presenter:
- Record your presentation video and send us through www.wetransfer.com
- Duration of the video: 20 -25 minutes
- Registration Fee: $399
Submission of Abstract with Biography to respective conference Program Manager or submission through direct online website. Upon submitting the abstract, you would receive an acknowledgment of acceptance from the respective Program Manager within 24 hours.
Simply Record your Presentation through Camera/ Phone with high clarity and send the same to conference Program Manager which will be presented at the conference venue on Speaker name and will also be available in website along with other presentations for the conference.
Well, there are many advantages! It was fun, interesting and kept the audience engaged. Of course, they had a budget and invested money into their presentation. They will come back and said it was well worth the investment in the end and they use it for many other uses.
In this regard, we take the immense pleasure to invite you all to be the speaker under Video Presentation category at “12th International Conference on Climate Change & Environmental Science” May 25-26, 2023 at London, UK. Climate Change: Challenges & Sustainability certification would be received by video presenters along with external scientific association with decision makers and leaders around the globe.
Join Speakers Video Presentation Club @ Climate Change Conference 2023
Conference Highlights
- Climate Change and Climatology
- Pollution & Its Effects on Climate
- Environmental Toxicology
- Endangered Species and Forestry
- Earth Science and Climate Change Policie
- Climate Hazards
- Global Warming
- Earth Science
- Climate Change & Biodiversity
- Health Consequences & Adaptability Development
- Regenerative Agriculture to Reverse Climate Change
- Climate Change Challenges & Sustainability
- Greenhouse Gases
- Climate Change: Marine Life
- Waste Management
- Air pollution
- Solar and volcanic activity
- Ecological Modelling
- Renewable energy
- Natural and Extraterrestrial Factors Affecting Climate Change
To share your views and research, please click here to register for the Conference.
To Collaborate Scientific Professionals around the World
Conference Date | October 02-03, 2023 | ||
Sponsors & Exhibitors |
|
||
Speaker Opportunity Closed | |||
Poster Opportunity Closed | Click Here to View |
Useful Links
Special Issues
All accepted abstracts will be published in respective Our International Journals.
Abstracts will be provided with Digital Object Identifier by