The report is the result of dozens of scientists and policy experts gathering in Washington, D.C., to confront the consequences of climate change and ensure scientific footing for nature-based climate solutions.
The report reviews the current knowledge in the field and offers a multidisciplinary plan for the science, tools and technologies needed to support a policy that will mitigate the effects of climate change.
The researchers are calling for a roughly $1 billion investment in science and infrastructure development to ensure nature-based climate solutions are robust and credible, that ground-based experiments and monitoring inform rigorously benchmarked maps, model predictions and protocol evaluations.
fundamental to ensuring their success.”
These approaches have substantial and growing support from bipartisan lawmakers, the private sector and conservation-minded organizations, but the scientific evidence to support their effectiveness is not fully developed.
The authors identify critical gaps in the science needed to support large-scale implementations of nature-based climate solutions and chart a research agenda to address these gaps. They also provide a set of principles to guide future assessments of the effectiveness and viability of nature-based climate solutions.
Among the numerous strategies for achieving the overall goal, Runkle’s research group focuses on ecosystem-scale measurement. They use micrometeorological flux towers to measure basic atmospheric conditions.
The measurements will enable the team to enhance and expand ground-based monitoring networks and distributed experiments.
The grant was one of 70 totaling a $2.8 billion investment in the creation of Partnerships for Climate Smart Commodities by the USDA.
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack visited Isbell Farms in central Arkansas in fall 2022 to highlight the project. Runkle has collaborated with the Isbells for several years, focusing on making rice production more sustainable and climate friendly.