Why sponge planet? Discussions on land-based, water-driven solutions

The recent Nature Water article, “To Solve Climate Change, We Need to Restore Our Sponge Planet,” by Kongjian Yu, Erica Gies, and Warren W. Wood, makes a compelling case for recalibrating climate strategies to prioritize the water cycle alongside reducing carbon emissions. The authors highlight how...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Spirn, Anne Whiston, Schellnhuber, Hans Joachim, Daigger, Glen T., Fu, Jun, Childs, Peter, Sedlak, David, Head, Peter, Ravasi, Timothy, de Meulder, Bruno, Shannon, Kelly, Dultzin, Daniel, Sosa, Fabiola, Kay, Arthur, da Rocha, Humberto R., Chou, Sin Chan, Buckeridge, Marcos, Nobre, Carlos A., Yokohari, Makoto, Xie, Shang-Ping, Ashraf, Kazi Khaleed, Strzepek, Kenneth M., Montalto, Franco
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Higher Education Press 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177084
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Summary:The recent Nature Water article, “To Solve Climate Change, We Need to Restore Our Sponge Planet,” by Kongjian Yu, Erica Gies, and Warren W. Wood, makes a compelling case for recalibrating climate strategies to prioritize the water cycle alongside reducing carbon emissions. The authors highlight how human activities—agriculture, urbanization, and industrialization—have degraded 75% of the earth’s land, severely disrupting natural water systems. This degradation diminishes the planet’s capacity to regulate temperature through water vapor, cloud formation, and the hydrological cycle, further accelerating climate instability.