Here is our new research on Chinese thirty-year cardiopulmonary mortality burden associated with long-term ozone exposure. Congratulations and gratitude to all collaborators! 💐💐💐
Alexander Archibald Yuming Guo Cambridge Chemistry Dr Chiara Giorio Serge Guillas Minghao Qiu Kim R. van Daalen, PhD
Mortality from increased wildfire smoke due to a warming climate could represent one of the largest costs of climate change in the US, from Minghao Qiu, Li, Gould, Jing, Kelp, Childs, Kiang, Heft-Neal, Diffenbaugh, and Marshall Burke nber.org/papers/w32307
Marshall Burke Chris Hayes StanfordECHOLab Minghao Qiu for perspective...here's a shot from S.F. bay area Sept 2020
Jason D sun town Marshall Burke Chris Hayes StanfordECHOLab Minghao Qiu This is LA. Yeah. Never happened like this 🙄
Improvements in air quality are slowing or being reversed in the US, and wildfires are substantially to blame, from Marshall Burke, Marissa L. Childs, Brandon De la Cuesta, Minghao Qiu, Jessica Li, Carlos F. Gould, Sam Heft-Neal, and Michael Wara nber.org/papers/w30882
On Tuesday, May 7th at 3pm ET/12pm PT the AGU_GeoHealth Early Career Committee will host a webinar on preparing and applying for faculty positions.
Drs. Chamteut Oh Chamteut Oh, Robbie Parks Robbie M. Parks, and Minghao Qiu Minghao Qiu will share their essential tips!
At #USAEE2023 , we've honored Connor Colombe (UT Austin) with the Best Student Paper award. Runners-up: Bhavin Pradhan (@UMNews), Peter Heller, & Michael Giovanniello (both Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)). Thanks to judges Yueming (Lucy) Qiu, Derek Olmstead, Minghao Qiu, and generous sponsorship from EPRI!
We are happy to announce that Minghao Qiu, postdoctoral scholar at Stanford University, was recognized at #usaee2023 as the winner of the Young Professional Best Research paper competition, led by Yuting Yang of Univ. of New Mexico, selected by judges Stefan Ambec, Dr. Anna Broughel, Tim Schittekatte, Paige Weber.
How many deaths in the US are linked to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) from wildfire smoke? Minghao Qiu & Sam Heft-Neal comment on their new paper suggesting it could be nearly 16,000 deaths each year - via NPR: n.pr/4diQaDl Marshall Burke
New work led by Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability's Minghao Qiu quantifies the effect of drought on electricity systems in the American West.
Finding that drought drives up fossil-based generation, which in turns increases costs, CO2e emissions & local air pollution.
pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pn…
New working paper on climate, wildfire smoke, and mortality, expertly led by Minghao Qiu StanfordECHOLab . We find that by mid-century in the US, damages from mortality from wildfire smoke are about equal to the sum of all other climate damages in recent estimates 🧵
If you haven't seen it yet, make sure to read this paper from @noelleselin, Minghao Qiu, and colleagues on how CO2 reductions in the USA can reduce #PM25 emissions but not fix racial/ethnic pollution exposure disparities! #EnvironmentalSocialScience nature.com/articles/s4146…
Concerned about water in the West?
Feeling the heat this summer?
Check out this recent work on climate changes effect on electricity production and emissions from Stanford University’s Minghao Qiu.
Exposure to more wildlife smoke may cause more deaths in US than any other aspect of climate change, according to striking new study. “It completely reshapes how we think about the climate impact in the US,” says Minghao Qiu
Stanford University. newscientist.com/article/242380…
New study led by Planetary Health Postdoctoral Fellow @Minghao_Qiu with Marshall Burke finds that increased use of fossil fuel plants during drought increases carbon emissions, methane leakage, local air pollution & deaths caused by poor air quality.
news.stanford.edu/2023/07/17/wes…
We are proud to have supported this work led by Stanford/LSHTM Planetary Health Postdoctoral Fellow Minghao Qiu quantifying how drought can drive increased emissions from fossil fuel plants, and the resulting impacts on human health!
Stanford Woods Institute London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Great Scientific American article on this year's unprecendented wildfire smoke by Meghan Bartels, featuring data on smoke exposure we put together StanfordECHOLab Minghao Qiu scientificamerican.com/article/americ…