IPSL climactions and the bottom-up ecological transformation of a climate research institute (2016-2024)
- 1Sorbonne Université, LMD, IPSL, Paris, France (lb543@cornell.edu)
- *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract
For several decades now, research communities working on the climate, its changes, including current global warming, and its consequences have been recommending drastic reductions in human-made greenhouse gas emissions and, more generally, in the ecological footprint of human activities. This implies the implementation over the next 10 to 20 years of profound and rapid systemic transformations. The latest IPCC reports show that such transformations are only possible if they involve all parts/sectors of society. Given the existence of a range of ecological constraints and the foreseeable limits to scientific and technical advances, the transformations to be implemented must also include a strong component of sufficiency ("avoidance”).
Since 2016, IPSL scientists and support staff have been working together along these lines to transform the institute's professional practices. This engagement is generally seen as : (i) a necessity: to initiate a transition in its research practices that will bring its professional behavior in line with the message of climate urgency that it has been diffusing for over 30 years; (ii) an opportunity: to accelerate the transition at a societal level by opening up new channels of exchange with society, encouraging collective action by example, and reinforcing the credibility of its warning message; (iii) a safeguard: collective bottom-up thinking at laboratory level to ensure that this transition takes place with maximum respect for our research practices and our well-being at work, and is not imposed by potentially inappropriate top-down measures.
Achievements include (i) the development of methodologies for calculating the carbon footprint generated by staff activities and professional practices, (ii) concrete contributions to the reduction of the environmental footprint of professional travels, digital and high performance computing activities, purchases and finally observation of the earth. We will present here our approach, methodologies, achievements, and reflections at this stage, with the hope to stimulate exchange with other ongoing or emerging initiatives in other parts of the world.
LMD, LATMOS, LOCEAN, LSCE, LISA, GEOPS, METIS
How to cite: Bonnefoy, L. and the IPSL Climactions: IPSL climactions and the bottom-up ecological transformation of a climate research institute (2016-2024), EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-19128, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-19128, 2024.