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Bert Bolin

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Name
  
Bert Bolin


Role
  
Professor

Bert Bolin The Scientists of Global Warming

Died
  
December 30, 2007, Stockholm, Sweden

Books
  
A History of the Science and Politics of Climate Change

Education
  
Stockholm University, Uppsala University

Organizations founded
  
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

V ramaswamy the bert bolin lecture on climate change 2009


Bert Rickard Johannes Bolin ([bæʈː bʊliːn]; 15 May 1925 – 30 December 2007) was a Swedish meteorologist who served as the first chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), from 1988 to 1997. He was professor of meteorology at Stockholm University from 1961 until his retirement in 1990.

Contents

Bert Bolin httpssimpleclimatefileswordpresscom201311

Bert bolin the weather machine bbc


Background

Bert Bolin

Bolin was born in Nyköping, Sweden and graduated from Uppsala University in 1946. He earned a master's degree in 1949 and a doctorate in 1956, both in meteorology, at Stockholm University. During his doctorate he spent a year in 1950 at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where he worked with Jule Charney, John von Neumann and others on the first computerized weather forecast, using ENIAC, the first electronic computer.

Bolin's marriage to Ulla Frykstrand ended in divorce in 1979; they had three children: Dan, Karina and Göran. Bolin resided in Österskär, north of Stockholm. He remained active until shortly before his death. He died in 2007 in Danderyd near Stockholm aged 82.

Career and awards

Bolin was Professor of Meteorology at Stockholm University 1961–1990, and involved in international climate research cooperation from the 1960s. Bolin was involved in organising use of the new satellite tools for climate research, which led to the formation of the ICSU Committee on Atmospheric Sciences (CAS) in 1964, with Bolin becoming its first Chairman. CAS started the Global Atmospheric Research Programme (GARP) in 1967, which Bolin also chaired; GARP became the World Climate Research Programme in 1980.

Bolin served on the Advisory Group on Greenhouse Gases from 1985. In 1987, the 500-page Brundtland Report which Bolin was involved with contributed to the setting up of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Under his chairmanship (from 1988 to 1997), the IPCC produced its First Assessment Report (1990) and Second Assessment Report (1995), contributing to the IPCC sharing the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former US Vice President Al Gore. Bolin was asked to accept the Prize on behalf of the IPCC, but was too ill to attend. Bolin is credited with bringing together a diverse range of views among the panel's 3,500 scientists into something resembling a consensus. The first report led to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, and the second to the Kyoto Protocol.

He has been scientific director of the European Space Research Organisation (now known as European Space Agency).

He received many awards and honors for his work in climate research, including the International Meteorological Organization Prize (1981), Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal (1984), the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement (1988), the highest atmospheric science award of the American Meteorological Society, Körber European Science Prize (1990), and the Blue Planet Prize (1995), often considered as the Nobel Prize for environmental sciences. He also jointly received the Global Environment Facility's 1999 Global Environment Leadership Award. Bolin was a member of the Swedish, Norwegian and Russian Academies of Sciences.

In November 2007, shortly before his death, Bolin published the partly autobiographical A History of the Science and Politics of Climate Change: The Role of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

References

Bert Bolin Wikipedia