
The Life Scientific Pierre Friedlingstein on carbon’s pivotal role in climate change
Dec 9, 2025
Pierre Friedlingstein, a leading climate scientist and Chair at the University of Exeter, discusses his groundbreaking work on carbon's role in climate change. He emphasizes the urgent need to understand the carbon budget and its limits for keeping global warming below 1.5°C. He sheds light on Brazil's deforestation and its impact on carbon storage, while also sharing his personal commitment to minimizing his carbon footprint. Friedlingstein provides actionable insights on how individuals can contribute to reducing emissions, showcasing a blend of scientific expertise and personal responsibility.
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Country Weekends Shaped Early Curiosity
- Pierre recalls a happy childhood spent in Brussels and weekends in the countryside playing outdoors.
- Those rural experiences shaped his early love of being outside and nature.
Early Work On Chaotic Sediment Models
- For his final-year project Pierre worked with Cathy Nicolis on chaotic mixing in deep-sea sediments.
- That modelling of noisy systems introduced him to environmental science and complexity.
Internship And Ozone Lesson
- A summer internship at NCAR introduced Pierre to atmospheric chemistry and the ozone issue.
- He saw that global action (the Montreal Protocol) successfully started ozone recovery, a hopeful precedent.
