Carbon Brief
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Carbon Brief is a UK-based website specialising in the science and policy of
climate change In common usage, climate change describes global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its effects on Earth's climate system. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to ...
. It has won awards for investigative journalism and data visualisation.
Leo Hickman Leo Hickman is a journalist specialising in climate change and has been the editor and director of CarbonBrief since 2015. Previously, he was a features journalist and editor with ''The Guardian'' from 1997 to 2013. From September 2013 to Dece ...
is the director and editor for Carbon Brief.


Founding

Carbon Brief is funded by the European Climate Foundation, and has their office located in London. The website was established in response to the Climategate controversy.


Reception

The New York Times climate team's newsletter in May 2018 highlighted a CarbonBrief article about climate engineering, solar climate engineering, as insightful. Carbon Brief's climate-and-energy coverage is often cited by news outlets, or climate related websites. YALE Climate Communications highlighted a summary of climate model projections, a 2011 The Guardian article quoted then-editor Christian Hunt, in 2017 The New York Times cited climate scientist Zeke Hausfather, and in 2018 MIT Technology Review cited an analysis on emissions scenarios.


Awards

The Royal Statistical Society gave Carbon Brief a ''Highly Commended'' award for investigative journalism in 2018, for the article ''Mapped: How UK foreign aid is spent on climate change'', authored by Leo Hickman and Rosamund Pearce, and in 2020 in the category data visualisation for ''How the UK transformed its electricity supply in just a decade''. In 2017, Carbon Brief won ''The Drum Online Media Award'' for "Best Specialist Site for Journalism". Carbon Brief's editor
Leo Hickman Leo Hickman is a journalist specialising in climate change and has been the editor and director of CarbonBrief since 2015. Previously, he was a features journalist and editor with ''The Guardian'' from 1997 to 2013. From September 2013 to Dece ...
was named 2020 ''Editor of the Year'' by the Association of British Science Writers. The judges commented:


See also

*Climate Central *Skeptical Science


References

{{Reflist, 2


External links


CarbonBrief
Companies based in the London Borough of Southwark British science websites Climate change blogs British environmental websites Internet properties established in 2010