Topics of this Issue | December 2024

COP29: No breakthrough for climate financeWhite Smokers: Spectacular chimneys in the Dead SeaExtreme Events: Role of climate changeClimate Change: Mobilisation of toxic metalsPlastics: More than a waste problemPolicy Brief: Chemicals RegulationStatement: Rethinking Agricultural ProductivityDiscussion Paper: The Potential of BECCS • PODCASTS: Risks from Chemicals during Pregnancy I  Biodiversity, Climate Change and Species ConservationRECOMMENDED FEATURE: The Rebirth of extinct SpeciesPERSONNEL MATTERSEVENT RECOMMENDATIONS

Xmas card: Susan Walter-Pantzer / UFZ

A turbulent year is coming to an end. Worldwide, we are not only concerned about political conflicts, but also about the state of our livelihoods: environmental pollution, global warming and species extinction continue to increase and, despite many negotiations, the global community has still not managed to agree on effective countermeasures in 2024. The knowledge would be there: researchers around the world have created a good basis. So let's keep the dialogue going. There is only one earth! 

COP29

No breakthrough for climate finance 

COP29 Baku ©IISD ENB Mike Muzurakis

The 29th UN Climate Change Conference focused on financial aid to support developing countries in climate protection, climate adaptation, and the mastering of losses and damages. The resolution was largely deferred to the next summit in Brazil. The CO₂ markets, ruled by the Paris Agreement, are set to commence. “Little progress” is the conclusion of climate economist Prof Reimund Schwarze and forest expert Dr Friedrich Bohn from the UFZ. 

White Smokers

Spectacular Chimneys discovered in the Dead Sea

Submarine chimneys ©Christian Siebert / UFZ

In a UFZ coordinated project, researchers have discovered meter-high chimneys on the floor of the Dead Sea. These are formed by the spontaneous crystallization of minerals from groundwater with an extremely high salt content flowing up out of the lake floor, they report in Science of the Total Environment. Discovered for the first time, these chimneys are an important early warning indicator for sinkholes. The subsidence craters are an eminent hazard for the population. 

Extreme Events

The 2022 Drought: What was the Role of Climate Change?

Deviation in soil moisture during the 2022 summer compared to a normal summer. ©UFZ

A research team coordinated by the UFZ has discovered that more than 30 percent of the extraordinary intensity and physical extent of the drought that affected large parts of Central / Southern Europe in the summer 2022 can be attributed to human-induced climate change. As they write in Nature Geoscience, this extreme event was exacerbated by the fact that climate change had already caused soil moisture levels to drop continuously over the previous years.

Climate Change

Mobilisation of Toxic Metals in Soils

Soil ©Sören Drabesch

Climate change could cause toxic metals that occur naturally in soils to become more mobile, destabilise ecosystems and increasingly enter the human food chain via agriculture. Scientists from the UFZ and the University of Tübingen have investigated this in an experimental study focusing on the behaviour of the toxic metal cadmium. Its mobility could increase by around 40 percent under future climate conditions. The study was published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment

PODCAST

Risks from Chemicals

How can pregnant Women protect themselves from Pollutants?

Schwangere Frau ©underdogstudios / fotolia

We come into contact with dozens of environmental chemicals every day. Many of the chemicals are harmless, but some can endanger our health – especially during pregnancy. How can we protect ourselves better? UFZ scientists Dr Nicole Meyer and Dr Florence Fischer explain this in a detektor.fm podcast. 

Plastics

Moving beyond the Perspective on Waste

Plastics / uladzimirzuyeu AdobeStock

In an overview study for the journal Environment International, an interdisciplinary UFZ team has evaluated more than 19,000 scientific studies and analysed the impacts of plastics on the three planetary crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution. Against the context of international efforts to reach a global UN plastics treaty, they are calling for regulations that account for the multifaceted impacts of plastics in these three crises.

Policy Brief

Potential for better Chemicals Regulation

UFZ Laboratory ©Bodo Tiedemann / UFZ

The global production of chemicals is expected to triple by 2050. So, we are exposed to more and more chemicals that are released into the environment and can endanger biodiversity and our health. The existing risk assessment procedures in the EU are too slow, too cumbersome and do not fulfil the regulatory requirements. Helmholtz researchers and representatives from NGOs, industry and authorities are therefore increasingly calling for New Approach Methodologies (NAMs).

PODCAST

Biodiversity, Climate Change and Species Conservation

Biodiversity and the Basis of our Livelihood

Josef Settele ©Daniel Fuerg

While climate change is now widely recognised and understood as a threat, for many people the threat to biodiversity remains an abstract problem that is difficult to grasp. Yet the two phenomena are closely linked and influence each other. How? UFZ agricultural biologist Prof Josef Settele explains in the 48forward podcast. 

Statement

Rethinking Agricultural Productivity: More than Yield and Land Area

Field ©André Künzelmann / UFZ

Traditionally, agricultural productivity has been evaluated as yield per unit of land. In view of climate change, limited resources and environmental impacts, this way of thinking falls short, write UFZ researchers in their statement. They redefine agricultural productivity as a multifaceted concept that extends beyond area-based yield. 

Discussion Paper

BECCS – a Sustainable Contribution to permanent CO2 Removal?

Graphic ©Backcountry Media / AdobeStock

The German government is preparing the introduction of CO2 Removal Technologies with its Long-term Strategy for Negative Emissions. Could bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage play a role in this? Based on the current material flows of the bioenergy system, researchers from UFZ and DBFZ discuss this question in their paper.

©ARTE-TV

FILM TIP

A Mammoth Project – the Rebirth of extinct Species

It's not just mammoths and Tasmanian Tiger that are set to return to save endangered habitats. Researchers around the world are working to recreate animal species that have disappeared. Using modern biotechnology and genetic engineering, they are extracting blueprints of their lost genetic material from museum exhibits. Is this a hope for the future or is science playing God – with unforeseeable consequences?

PERSONNELL MATTERS

Aletta Bonn ©privat

Prof Aletta Bonn

Biologist Aletta Bonn, Head of the Department of Biodiversity and People at UFZ and iDiv, is one of the nine scientists appointed by the Federal Cabinet to the German Advisory Council on Global Change (WBGU) on 1 November. The WBGU is fully independent in its work and choice of topics. It is monitored and supported by an interministerial committee of the federal government in which the Federal Chancellery and all the ministries are represented. 

Josef Settele, Ingolf Kühn, Jakob Zscheischler

Prof Josef Settele, Prof Ingolf Kühn und Prof Jakob Zscheischler 

Three UFZ scientists – agroecologist Josef Settele, macroecologist Ingolf Kühn and climate scientist Jakob Zscheischler – are represented in the annual ranking of the most cited and therefore most influential researchers worldwide in 2024. Each researcher selected has authored multiple Highly Cited Papers™ which rank in the top 1 percent by citations for their field and publication year in the Web of Science™ over the past decade.  

UFZ Research Award 2024

UFZ research award winners from left to right: Dr. Danial Esmaeili, Dr. Matthias Jordan, Prof. Dr. Daniela Thrän, Prof. Dr. Stan Harpole und Nora Mittelstädt ©André Künzelmann / UFZ

Ecologist Prof Stan Harpole (UFZ/iDiv) and a UFZ team led by bioenergy expert Prof Daniela Thrän – Dr Danial Esmaeili Aliabadi, Dr Matthias Jordan and Nora Mittelstädt – share the UFZ research award, which is endowed with 10,000 euros. With this award, the jury honours the excellent scientific achievements of the award winners over the past three years. 

EVENT RECOMMENDATIONS

Scientific Evaluation

February 3-6 I UFZ intern

Helmholtz’ program-oriented funding (PoF) is a major source of funding for all Helmholtz Centers. It requires a regular evaluation of the quality of research. The UFZ will be evaluated from February 3-6, 2025. A group of around 20 international reviewers, chaired by the Dutch science manager Dr Bram de Vos, will come to Leipzig and evaluate the UFZ research. 

DBU digital: Why Business and Science expect a courageous Biodiversity Policy

February 19 I 1-3 p.m. I Discussion I Digital

What will the biodiversity policy of the next German government look like? Will it succeed in anchoring what was once a niche topic as one of the central issues in all policy areas and thus realise its potential for the economy, health and society? Immediately before the general election, experts from science and economy formulate their most important expectations of the future government. Among others with: Prof Katrin Böhning-Gaese, Dr Eckart von Hirschhausen and Prof Johannes Vogel. 

SOCIAL MEDIA

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Text / image editing: Susanne Hufe I Benjamin Haerdle I Doris Wolst • presse@ufz.de
Photo credits: Susan Walter-Pantzer I UFZ • Mike Muzurakis I IISD ENB • Christian Siebert I UFZ • Sören Drabesch I UFZ • underdogstudios I fotolia • uladzimirzuyeu I AdobeStock • Bodo Tiedemann • Daniel Fuerg • André Künzelmann I UFZ • Sebastian Wiedling I UFZ • Backcountry Media I AdobeStock • ARTE-TV

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