James Hansen
James Hansen
Scientific career
Fields Atmospheric physics
After graduate school, Hansen continued his work with Institutions Currently Columbia University;
radiative transfer models, attempting to understand the NASA Goddard Institute for
Venusian atmosphere. He later applied and refined Space Studies 1967–2013
these models to understand the Earth's atmosphere, and Thesis The atmosphere of Venus : a
in particular, the effects that aerosols and trace gases dust insulation model (http://ww
have on Earth's climate. His development and use of w.worldcat.org/oclc/3215292
global climate models has contributed to the further 1) (1967)
understanding of the Earth's climate. In 2009, his first
Doctoral Satoshi Matsushima
book, Storms of My Grandchildren, was published.[12] advisor
In 2012, he presented the TED Talk "Why I must speak
Website www.columbia.edu/~jeh1 (http://
out about climate change".[13]
www.columbia.edu/~jeh1)
From 1981 to 2013, he was the director of the NASA
Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City, a part of the Goddard Space Flight Center.
As of 2014, Hansen directs the Program on Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions at Columbia
University's Earth Institute.[14] The program is working to continue to "connect the dots" from advancing
basic climate science to promoting public awareness to advocating policy actions.
Hansen is representing his granddaughter as well as "future generations" as plaintiffs in the Juliana v.
United States lawsuit, which is suing the United States government and some of its executive branch's
positions for not protecting a stable climate system.
Hansen has stated that one of his research interests is radiative transfer in planetary atmospheres,
especially the interpretation of remote sensing of the Earth's atmosphere and surface from satellites.
Because of the ability of satellites to monitor the entire globe, they may be one of the most effective ways
to monitor and study global change. His other interests include the development of global circulation
models to help understand the observed climate trends, and diagnosing human impacts on climate.[15]
Studies of Venus
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, following his Ph.D. dissertation, Hansen published several papers on
the planet Venus. Venus has a high brightness temperature in the radio frequencies compared to the
infrared. He proposed that the hot surface was the result of aerosols trapping the internal energy of the
planet.[16] More recent studies have suggested that several billion years ago, Venus's atmosphere was
much more like Earth's than it is now and that there were probably substantial quantities of liquid water
on the surface, but a runaway greenhouse effect was caused by the evaporation of that original water,
which generated a critical level of greenhouse gases in its atmosphere.[17]
Hansen continued his study of Venus by looking at the
composition of its clouds. He looked at the near-infrared
reflectivity of ice clouds, compared them to observations of Venus,
and found that they qualitatively agreed.[18] He also was able to
use a radiative transfer model to establish an upper limit to the size
of the ice particles if the clouds were actually made of ice.[19]
The Pioneer Venus project was launched in May 1978 and reached Venus late that same year. Hansen
collaborated with Larry Travis and other colleagues in a 1979 Science article that reported on the
development and variability of clouds in the ultraviolet spectrum. They concluded that there are at least
three different cloud materials that contribute to the images: a thin haze layer, sulfuric acid clouds and an
unknown ultraviolet absorber below the sulfuric acid cloud layer.[22] The linear polarization data obtained
from the same mission confirmed that the low- and mid-level clouds were sulfuric acid with radius of
about 1 micrometer. Above the cloud layer was a layer of submicrometre haze.[23] Evidence published in
the early 1980s showed that the clouds consist mainly of sulfur dioxide and sulfuric acid droplets.[24]
With the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo, 1992 saw a cooling in global temperatures. There was
speculation that this would cause the next couple of years to be cooler because of the large serial
correlation in the global temperatures. Bassett and Lin found the statistical odds of a new temperature
record to be small.[28] Hansen countered by saying that having insider information shifted the odds to
those who know the physics of the climate system, and that whether there is a new temperature record
depends upon the particular data set used.[29]
The temperature data was updated in 1999 to report that 1998 was the warmest year since the
instrumental data began in 1880. They also found that the rate of temperature change was larger than at
any time in instrument history, and concluded that the recent El Niño was not solely responsible for the
large temperature anomaly in 1998. In spite of this, the United States had seen a smaller degree of
warming, and a region in the eastern U.S. and the western Atlantic Ocean had actually cooled slightly.[30]
2001 saw a major update to how the temperature was calculated. It incorporated corrections due to the
following reasons: time-of-observation bias; station history changes; classification of rural/urban station;
the urban adjustment based on satellite measurements of night light intensity, and relying more on rural
station than urban. Evidence was found of local urban warming in urban, suburban and small-town
records.[31]
The anomalously high global temperature in 1998 due to El Niño resulted in a brief drop in subsequent
years. However, a 2001 Hansen report in the journal Science states that global warming continues, and
that the increasing temperatures should stimulate discussions on how to slow global warming.[32] The
temperature data was updated in 2006 to report that temperatures are now 0.8 °C warmer than a century
ago, and concluded that the recent global warming is a real climate change and not an artifact from the
urban heat island effect. The regional variation of warming, with more warming in the higher latitudes, is
further evidence of warming that is anthropogenic in origin.[33]
In 2007, Stephen McIntyre notified GISS that many of the U.S. temperature records from the Historical
Climatology Network (USHCN) displayed a discontinuity around the year 2000. NASA corrected the
computer code used to process the data and credited McIntyre with pointing out the flaw.[34] Hansen
indicated that he felt that several news organizations had overreacted to this mistake.[35][36] In 2010,
Hansen published a paper entitled "Global Surface Temperature Change" describing current global
temperature analysis.[37]
A 2007 paper used the GISS climate model in an attempt to determine the origin of black carbon in the
arctic. Much of the arctic aerosol comes from south Asia. Countries such as the United States and Russia
have a lower contribution than previously assumed.[42]
In 2003, Hansen wrote a paper called "Can We Defuse the Global Warming Time Bomb?" in which he
argued that human-caused forces on the climate are now greater than natural ones, and that this, over a
long time period, can cause large climate changes.[45] He further stated that a lower limit on "dangerous
anthropogenic interference" was set by the stability of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. His view
on actions to mitigate climate change was that "halting global warming requires urgent, unprecedented
international cooperation, but the needed actions are feasible and have additional benefits for human
health, agriculture and the environment."
In a 2004 presentation at the University of Iowa, Hansen announced that he was told by high-ranking
government officials not to talk about how anthropogenic influence could have a dangerous effect on
climate because it was not understood what 'dangerous' meant, or how humans were actually affecting
climate. He described this as a Faustian bargain because atmospheric aerosols had health risks, and
should be reduced, but doing so would effectively increase the warming effects from CO2.[46]
Hansen and coauthors proposed that the global mean temperature was a good tool to diagnose dangerous
anthropogenic interference with the climate system. Two elements were identified as particularly
important when discussing dangerous anthropogenic interference: sea level rise and the extinction of
species. They described a business-as-usual scenario, which has greenhouse gases growing at
approximately 2% per year; and an alternate scenario, in which greenhouse gases concentrations decline.
Under the alternate scenario, sea levels could rise by 1 meter per century, causing problems due to the
dense population in coastal areas. But this would be minor compared to the 10-meter increase in sea level
under the business-as-usual scenario. Hansen described the situation with species extinction similarly to
that of sea level rise. Assuming the alternate scenario, the situation would not be good, but it would be
much worse for business as usual.[33]
The concept of dangerous anthropogenic interference was clarified in a 2007 paper, finding that further
warming of 1 °C would be highly disruptive to humans. An alternate scenario would keep the warming to
below this if climate sensitivity were below 3 °C for doubled CO2. The conclusion was that CO2 levels
above 450 ppm were considered dangerous, but that reduction in non-CO2 greenhouse gases could
provide temporary relief from drastic CO2 cuts. Further findings are that arctic climate change has been
forced by non-CO2 constituents as much as by CO2. The 2007 paper cautioned that prompt action is
needed to slow CO2 growth and to prevent a dangerous anthropogenic interference.[47]
By the early 1980s, the computational speed of computers, along with refinements in climate models,
allowed longer experiments. The models now included physics beyond the previous equations, such as
convection schemes, diurnal changes, and snow-depth calculations. The advances in computational
efficiency, combined with the added physics, meant the GISS model could be run for five years. It was
shown that global climate can be simulated reasonably well with a grid-point resolution as coarse as 1000
kilometers.[52]
The first climate prediction computed from a general circulation model that was published by Hansen
was in 1988, the same year as his well-known Senate testimony.[53] The second generation of the GISS
model was used to estimate the change in mean surface temperature based on a variety of scenarios of
future greenhouse gas emissions. Hansen concluded that global warming would be evident within the
next few decades, and that it would result in temperatures at least as high as during the Eemian. He
argued that if the temperature rose 0.4 °C above the 1950–1980 mean for a few years, it would be the
"smoking gun" pointing to human-caused global warming.[54]
A year later, Hansen joined with Rahmstorf and colleagues comparing climate projections with
observations. The comparison was done from 1990 through January 2007 against physics-based models
that are independent from the observations after 1990. They showed that the climate system may be
responding faster than the models indicate. Rahmstorf and coauthors showed concern that sea levels are
rising at the high range of the IPCC projections, and that this was due to thermal expansion and not from
melting of the Greenland or Antarctic ice sheets.[55]
Following the launch of spacecraft capable of determining temperatures, Roy Spencer and John Christy
published the first version of their satellite temperature measurements in 1990. Contrary to climate
models and surface measurements, their results showed a cooling in the troposphere.[56] However, in
1998, Wentz and Schabel determined that orbital decay had an effect on the derived temperatures.[57]
Hansen compared the corrected troposphere temperatures with the results of the published GISS model,
and concluded that the model is in good agreement with the observations, noting that the satellite
temperature data had been the last holdout of global warming denialists, and that the correction of the
data would result in a change from discussing whether global warming is occurring to what is the rate of
global warming, and what should be done about it.[58]
Hansen has continued the development and diagnostics of climate models. For instance, he has helped in
the investigations of the decadal trends in tropopause height, which could be a useful tool for determining
the human "fingerprint" on climate.[59] As of 12 February 2009, the current version of the GISS model is
Model E. This version has seen improvements in many areas, including upper-level winds, cloud height,
and precipitation. This model still has problems with regions of marine stratocumulus clouds.[60] A later
paper showed that the model's main problems are having too weak of an ENSO-like variability, and poor
sea ice modeling, resulting in too little ice in the Southern Hemisphere and too much in the Northern
Hemisphere.[61]
In a 2007 paper, Hansen discussed the potential danger of "fast-feedback" effects causing ice sheet
disintegration, based on paleoclimate data.[63] George Monbiot reports "The IPCC predicts that sea levels
could rise by as much as 59 centimetres (1.94 ft) this century.[64] Hansen's paper argues that the slow
melting of ice sheets the panel expects doesn't fit the data. The geological record suggests that ice at the
poles does not melt in a gradual and linear fashion, but flips suddenly from one state to another. When
temperatures increased to 2 - 3 °C (3.6-5.4 °F) above today's level 3.5 million years ago, sea levels rose
not by 59 centimeters but by 25 metres (82 ft). The ice responded immediately to changes in
temperature."[65]
Hansen stressed the uncertainties around these predictions. "It is difficult to predict time of collapse in
such a nonlinear problem … An ice sheet response time of centuries seems probable, and we cannot rule
out large changes on decadal time-scales once wide-scale surface melt is underway."[63] He concludes
that "present knowledge does not permit accurate specification of the dangerous level of human-made
[greenhouse gases]. However, it is much lower than has commonly been assumed. If we have not already
passed the dangerous level, the energy infrastructure in place ensures that we will pass it within several
decades."[63]
In 2013, Hansen authored a paper called "Climate sensitivity, sea level and atmospheric carbon dioxide,"
in which he estimated climate sensitivity to be (3±1) °C based on Pleistocene paleoclimate data. The
paper also concluded that burning all fossil fuels "would make most of the planet uninhabitable by
humans."[66]
In 2016, a team of 19 researchers led by Hansen published a paper "Ice melt, sea level rise and
superstorms: evidence from paleoclimate data, climate modeling, and modern observations that 2 °C
global warming could be dangerous" describing the effect of meltwater from ice sheets on the Atlantic
meridional overturning circulation (slowing it or even stopping) and Antarctic bottom water formation.
This would speed up ice sheet melting and sea level rise by increasing the water temperature at hundreds
of meters depth, thawing ice shelves from below. And the cool fresh meltwater on the ocean close to
Greenland and Antarctica leads to larger temperature difference between tropics and middle latitudes,
what would enable storms as strong as in the last interglacial, the Eemian, whose evidence includes,
among others, megaboulders on Bahamas.[67][68]
In 2023, Hansen led a team of 18 researchers to publish a paper titled "Global Warming in the
Pipeline."[69] In it, Hansen et al. concluded that a doubling of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would
lead to an increase of 4.8 ±1.2 °C, significantly above earlier estimates.[70] His team also concluded that
the decline in global aerosol emissions from air pollution will accelerate the rate of global warming,
going from an increase of 0.18 °C per decade between 1970 and 2010 to an increase of 0.27 °C per
decade after 2010, with the world passing the 1.5 °C threshold before the end of the 2020s and the 2 °C
threshold before 2050 without significant changes.[69] The paper also concluded that sea level rise will be
greater than the IPCC estimates and one of the ocean's major circulation systems could collapse before
the end of the century.[70]
According to science historian Spencer R. Weart, Hansen's testimony increased public awareness of
climate change.[81] According to Richard Besel of California Polytechnic State University, Hansen's
testimony "was an important turning point in the history of global climate change."[79] According to
Timothy M. O'Donnell of the University of Mary Washington, Hansen's testimony was "pivotal," "ignited
public discussion of global warming and moved the controversy from a largely scientific discussion to a
full blown science policy debate," and marked "the official beginning of the global warming policy
debate."[82] According to Roger A. Pielke of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, Hansen's
"call to action" "elevated the subject of global warming and the specter of associated impacts such as
more hurricanes, floods, and heat waves, to unprecedented levels of attention from the public, media, and
policy makers."[83]
During his testimony before the Iowa Utilities Board in 2007, Hansen likened coal trains to "death trains"
and asserted that these would be "no less gruesome than if they were boxcars headed to crematoria,
loaded with uncountable irreplaceable species."[86] In response, the National Mining Association stated
that his comparison "trivialized the suffering of millions" and "undermined his credibility."[87][88] Citing
the reactions of "several people" and "three of his scientific colleagues" as his primary motivation,
Hansen stated that he certainly did not mean to trivialize suffering by the families who lost relatives in the
Holocaust and then apologized, saying he regretted that his words caused pain to some readers.[89]
After Hansen's arrest, New York Times columnist Andrew Revkin wrote: "Dr. Hansen has pushed far
beyond the boundaries of the conventional role of scientists, particularly government scientists, in the
environmental policy debate."[92]
Hansen and about 100 other people were arrested in September 2010 in front of the White House in
Washington, DC. The group was seeking a ban on mountaintop removal or surface mining.[94][95]
Keystone Pipeline
In a CBC interview aired in April 2013, as Canadian Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver lobbied in
Washington, DC for approval of the Keystone pipeline extension intended to carry more synthetic crude
oil from Canada's Athabasca Oil Sands to the Gulf of Mexico,[103] Hansen forcefully argued against the
use of these unconventional fossil fuels. According to Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) and other energy organizations "there is more than twice as much carbon in the tar sands oil" than
in conventional oil. Hansen argued that coal, tar sands, and tar shale should not be used as energy sources
because of their carbon emissions and claimed that the completion of the Keystone pipeline would
increase the extraction of oil from oil sands. He explained that the effects of climate change may not be
apparent until the far future: "It's not the case where you emit something and you see the effect. We see
the beginnings of the effect but the large impacts are going to be in future decades and that science is
crystal clear … Effects come slowly because of the inertia of the climate system. It takes decades, even
centuries to get the full response. But we know the last time the world was 2 degrees warmer, sea level
was 6 meters or 20 feet higher."[104] Hansen urged President Obama to reject the Keystone pipeline
extension intended to carry more synthetic crude oil from Canada's Athabasca Oil Sands to the Gulf of
Mexico.[103] On February 13, 2013, Hansen was again arrested at the White House, along with Daryl
Hannah and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., during a further protest against the proposed Keystone pipeline
extension.[105]
Proposed solutions
Recently Hansen stated his support for a revenue-neutral fee and dividend system to impose a price on
carbon that returns the money collected from the fossil fuel industry equally to all legal residents of the
United States. In an interview on CBC television on March 3, 2015, Dr Hansen stated "The solution [to
climate change] has to be a rising price on carbon and then the really dirty fuels like tar sands would fall
on the table very quickly. They make no sense at all if you look at it from an economic-wide perspective.
If we would simply put a fee on carbon – you would collect from the fossil fuel companies at the source
(the domestic mines or the ports of entry) and then distribute that money to the public, an equal amount to
all legal residents, that would begin to make the prices honest. And that's what the economy needs in
order to be most efficient. Right now the external costs of fossil fuels are borne completely by the public.
If your child gets asthma, you pay the bill, the fossil fuel company doesn't. What we need is to make the
system honest."[106]
At the end of 2008, Hansen stated five priorities that he felt then President-elect Barack Obama should
adopt "for solving the climate and energy problems, while stimulating the economy": efficient energy use,
renewable energy, a smart grid, generation IV nuclear reactors and carbon capture and storage. Regarding
nuclear, he expressed opposition to the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository, stating that the $25
Billion (US) surplus held in the Nuclear Waste Fund "should be used to develop fast reactors that
consume nuclear waste, and thorium reactors to prevent the creation of new long-lived nuclear waste."[99]
In 2009, Hansen wrote an open letter to President Obama where he advocated a "Moratorium and phase-
out of coal plants that do not capture and store CO2".[96] In his first book Storms of My Grandchildren,
similarly, Hansen discusses his Declaration of Stewardship, the first principle of which requires "a
moratorium on coal-fired power plants that do not capture and sequester carbon dioxide".[107]
In March 2013, Hansen co-authored a paper in Environmental Science & Technology, entitled "Prevented
mortality and greenhouse gas emissions from historical and projected nuclear power". The paper
examined mortality rates per unit of electrical power produced from fossil fuels (coal and natural gas) as
well as nuclear power. It estimated that 1.8 million air pollution-caused deaths were prevented worldwide
between 1971 and 2009, through the use of nuclear power instead of fossil fuels. The paper also
concluded that the emission of some 64 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent were avoided by
nuclear power use between 1971 and 2009. Looking to the future, between 2010 and 2050, it was
estimated that nuclear could additionally avoid up to 420,000 to 7 million premature deaths and 80 to 240
billion tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions.[108]
This paper elicited a critical response to Kharecha and Hansen's analysis, from an international group of
senior academic energy policy analysts, including Benjamin Sovacool, M.V. Ramana, Mark Z. Jacobson,
and Mark Diesendorf. They asserted that nuclear power needs large subsidies to be economically viable,
and typically there are substantial construction delays and cost overruns associated with nuclear plants.
Sovacool et al. also claim that Kharecha and Hansen's estimates of Chernobyl Disaster mortalities is very
low, which biases their conclusions. All of these factors are said to make Kharecha and Hansen's article
"incomplete and misleading".[109] Kharecha and Hansen countered that all the data these scientists use to
make their criticism, "lacks credibility".[110]
In 2013, Hansen and three other leading climate experts wrote an open letter to policy makers, saying that
"continued opposition to nuclear power threatens humanity's ability to avoid dangerous climate
change."[111] The reaction from anti-nuclear environmental groups (e.g. the Natural Resources Defense
Council, Sierra Club, and Greenpeace) was negative, citing nuclear safety and security issues, and the
economics of nuclear power plants.[112]
Together with Michael Shellenberger, Hansen began touring the world in the late 2010s, providing
evidence for the climatic benefits of nuclear energy and to bring attention to the $2 trillion the US has
spent on "new renewables" that despite the cost have not even caught up to nuclear in annual electricity
generation, an issue reflected in Germany and elsewhere.[113][114]
In June 2006, Hansen appeared on 60 Minutes stating that the George W. Bush White House had edited
climate-related press releases reported by federal agencies to make global warming seem less
threatening.[76] He also stated that he was unable to speak freely without the backlash of other
government officials, and that he had not experienced that level of restrictions on communicating with the
public during his career.[76]
Criticism
In June 2009, New Yorker journalist Elizabeth Kolbert wrote that Hansen
is "increasingly isolated among climate activists."[121] Eileen Claussen,
president of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, said that "I view
Jim Hansen as heroic as a scientist.... But I wish he would stick to what he
really knows. Because I don't think he has a realistic idea of what is
politically possible, or what the best policies would be to deal with this
problem."[121]
James Hansen arrested at
In July 2009, New York Times climate columnist Christa Marshall asked if a demonstration outside the
White House, August 29,
Hansen still matters in the ongoing climate debate, noting that he "has
2011
irked many longtime supporters with his scathing attacks against President
Obama's plan for a cap-and-trade system."[122] "The right wing loves what
he's doing," said Joseph Romm, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think
tank.[122] Hansen said that he had to speak out, since few others could explain the links between politics
and the climate models. "You just have to say what you think is right," he said.[122]
In 2007, Hansen shared the US$1-million Dan David Prize for "achievements having an outstanding
scientific, technological, cultural or social impact on our world". In 2008, he received the PNC Bank
Common Wealth Award of Distinguished Service for his "outstanding achievements" in science. At the
end of 2008, Hansen was named by EarthSky Communications and a panel of 600 scientist-advisors as
the Scientist Communicator of the Year, citing him as an "outspoken authority on climate change" who
had "best communicated with the public about vital science issues or concepts during 2008."[126]
In 2009, Hansen was awarded the 2009 Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal,[126] the highest honor
bestowed by the American Meteorological Society, for his "outstanding contributions to climate
modeling, understanding climate change forcings and sensitivity, and for clear communication of climate
science in the public arena."[127]
Andrew Freedman wrote in The Washington Post that the Society had erred in giving Hansen the medal:
"His body of work is not at issue... Rather, the problem arises due to the AMS' recognition of Hansen's
public communication work on climate change."[128]
Hansen won the 2010 Sophie Prize, set up in 1997 by Norwegian Jostein Gaarder, the author of the 1991
best-selling novel and teenagers' guide to philosophy Sophie's World,[129] for his " key role for the
development of our understanding of human-induced climate change."
Foreign Policy named Hansen one of its 2012 FP Top 100 Global Thinkers "for sounding the alarm on
climate change, early and often".[130]
In December 2012, Hansen received the Commonwealth Club of California's annual Stephen H.
Schneider Award for Outstanding Climate Science Communications at a ceremony in San Francisco[131]
On November 7, 2013, Hansen received the Joseph Priestley Award at Dickinson College in Carlisle,
Pennsylvania "...for his work advancing our understanding of climate change, including the early
application of numerical models to better understand observed climate trends and to project humans'
impact on climate, and for his leadership in promoting public understanding of climate and linking the
knowledge to action on climate policy." He delivered a lecture, entitled, "White House Arrest and the
Climate Crisis," later that same day at Anita Tuvin Schlechter Auditorium on the college's campus.[132]
James Hansen was co-winner with climatologist Syukuro Manabe of the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of
Knowledge Award in the Climate Change category in the ninth edition (2016) of the awards. The two
laureates were separately responsible for constructing the first computational models with the power to
simulate climate behavior. Decades ago, they correctly predicted how much Earth's temperature would
rise due to increasing atmospheric CO2. The scores of models currently in use to chart climate evolution
are heirs to those developed by Manabe and Hansen.[133]
In June 2018, Hansen was named joint winner, with Veerabhadran Ramanathan, of Taiwan's Tang Prize.
Hansen's prize had a total value of NT$25 million.[134]
Publications
Over 160 publications have been authored by James Hansen. Since 2020, he has published observations
and commentary at redgreenandblue.org (https://www.redgreenandblue.org), averaging approximately
once per month.[135]
Hansen, James E. (2009). Storms of My Grandchildren: The Truth About the Coming
Climate Catastrophe and Our Last Chance to Save Humanity. New York: Bloomsbury
Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60819-200-7.
See also
References
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Further reading
Bowen, Mark (2008). Censoring Science: Inside the Political Attack on Dr. James Hansen
and the Truth of Global Warming (https://archive.org/details/censoringscience00bowe). New
York: Dutton. ISBN 978-0-525-95014-1.
External links
James Hansen (https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2310230/) at IMDb
Program on Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions (http://csas.ei.columbia.edu/) at the
Earth Institute, Columbia University
"James Hansen" (https://web.archive.org/web/20131113060351/http://eesc.columbia.edu/fa
culty/james-e-hansen). Archived from the original (http://eesc.columbia.edu/faculty/james-e-
hansen) on November 13, 2013. Directory entry at the Department of Earth and
Environmental Sciences, Columbia University
"James Hansen" (https://web.archive.org/web/20041015153937/http://www.giss.nasa.gov/st
aff/jhansen.html). Archived from the original (https://www.giss.nasa.gov/staff/jhansen.html)
on October 15, 2004. Directory entry at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
James Hansen (https://www.ted.com/speakers/james_hansen) at TED
James Hansen (http://www.c-span.org/person/?jamesehansen) on C-SPAN
James Hansen - Scientific Reticence: A Threat to Humanity and Nature (https://www.youtub
e.com/watch?v=S7z61UZoppM). Press Conference in Bonn during COP23, 2017-11-19 (24
min). From ClimateMatters.TV (http://climatematters.tv/) series of United Planet Faith and
Science Initiative (http://www.upfsi.org/) Archived (https://web.archive.org/web/20180206222
212/http://www.upfsi.org/) February 6, 2018, at the Wayback Machine.
James Hansen's publications (https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.url?authorId=74043345
32) indexed by the Scopus bibliographic database. (subscription required)