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Kevin Anderson

Researcher at University of Manchester

Publications -  128
Citations -  6006

Kevin Anderson is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Greenhouse gas. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 123 publications receiving 5309 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin Anderson include Uppsala University & Manchester Metropolitan University.

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The trouble with negative emissions

TL;DR: If the Integrated Assessment Models informing policy-makers assume the large-scale use of negative-emission technologies and they are not deployed or are unsuccessful at removing CO2 from the atmosphere at the levels assumed, society will be locked into a high-temperature pathway.
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Observation of muon neutrino disappearance with the MINOS detectors in the NuMI neutrino beam

D. G. Michael, +302 more
TL;DR: In this article, the MINOS experiment reported results from its initial exposure to neutrinos from the Fermilab NuMI beam, and the rate and energy spectra of charged current muon neutrino interactions are compared in two detectors located along the beam axis at distances of 1 km and 735 km.
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Beyond 'dangerous' climate change: emission scenarios for a new world.

TL;DR: A cumulative emissions framing is used, broken down to Annex 1 and non-Annex 1 nations, to understand the implications of rapid emission growth in nations such as China and India, for mitigation rates elsewhere and suggests little to no chance of maintaining the global mean surface temperature at or below 2°C.

Reframing the climate change challenge in light of post-2000 emission trends

TL;DR: It is increasingly unlikely any global agreement will deliver the radical reversal in emission trends required for stabilization at 450 ppmv carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e), and the current framing of climate change cannot be reconciled with the rates of mitigation necessary to stabilize at 550 ppsmv CO2e.
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Four degrees and beyond: the potential for a global temperature increase of four degrees and its implications.

TL;DR: The 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change commits signatories to preventing dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system, leaving unspecified the level of global warming as mentioned in this paper, which is the threshold at which global warming reaches dangerous levels.