Nature Climate Change

Nature Climate Change is a monthly journal dedicated to publishing the most significant and cutting-edge research on the nature, underlying causes or impacts of global climate change and its implications for the economy, policy and the world at large. Nature Climate Change publishes original research across the natural and social sciences and strives to synthesize interdisciplinary research. The journal follows the standards for high-quality science set by all Nature-branded journals and is committed to publishing top-tier original research in all areas relating to climate change through a fair and rigorous review process, access to a broad readership, high standards of copy editing and production, rapid publication and independence from academic societies and others with vested interests. Topics covered in the journal include: • Adaptation • Anthropology • Atmospheric science • Biochemistry • Communication • Cryospheric science • Ecology • Economics • Energy • Ethics • Geography • Health • Hydrology • Impacts and vulnerability • Mitigation • Modelling • Oceanography • Palaeoclimate • Philosophy • Policy and governance • Political science • Psychology • Sociology • Sustainability and development

Published by Nature Publishing Group.

Publications

Title Type Author(s) Year
Aligning artificial intelligence with climate change mitigation Journal Article Kaack et al. 2022
Could Bitcoin emissions push global warming above 2 °C? Journal Article Dittmar and Praktiknjo 2019
Implausible projections overestimate near-term Bitcoin CO 2 emissions Journal Article Masanet et al. 2019
Rational mining limits Bitcoin emissions Journal Article Nicolas Houy 2019
The food-energy-water nexus and urban complexity Journal Article Romero-Lankao et al. 2017
Groundwater vulnerability on small islands Journal Article Holding et al. 2016
Climate and southern Africa's water–energy–food nexus Journal Article Conway et al. 2015
Stock dynamics and emission pathways of the global aluminium cycle Journal Article Gang Liu et al. 2013