Adele Morrison secured a fellowship and grant from the L'Oréal-UNESCO
For Women in Science program. Picture: Sitthixay Ditthavong |
It's not a pleasant thing to think about but for Australian National University scientist Adele Morrison, it's something that she considers on a daily basis.
The climate and fluid physicist researches oceanic movements around Antarctica's ice sheet to determine when coastal cities will be at risk of rising sea levels. It is this work which on Monday saw her awarded a fellowship and a $25,000 grant from the L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science program.
The L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science program aims to address the under-representation of women in science.
According to United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) data, less than 30 per cent of the world's researchers are female.
It's for this reason that Dr Morrison says the benefit of receiving the grant is not just what the money will do for her research but that it also draws attention to the under-representation of women in science.
"It depends on what level of science you're looking at. The numbers at a PhD level and early career stage - which is where I am - are actually pretty equal," she says.
"The problem occurs higher up at the leadership stage. In Australia, 17 per cent of senior Australian researchers working in science are female. It just drops off dramatically at about this stage because that's when women start having kids and it becomes hard to keep working at the top level.
"Universities in Australia are fantastic - at least at ANU it is - and they've put in a lot of great policies for helping women and trying to increase the representation at higher levels.
"But this culture is only just really starting to change, and internationally it's pretty dire."
Dr Morrison is undertaking advanced computer modelling to study and map the ocean activity relevant to the melting of the Antarctic sheet so that it can be determined how long it will be until cities are underwater.
With 40 per cent of the global population and 85 per cent of the Australian population currently living within coastal regions, the rising of sea levels in coming years caused from the melting of Antarctica's ice sheets is of major concern.
"The impact of the sea level will mostly be felt from extreme sea-level events, so it's not so much just the slow inundation from rising sea level, it's when you get extreme events," Dr Morrison says.
"These currently occur when you get like a king high tide combined with a storm event. You might remember back in 2016 there was one of these events on the northern beaches in Sydney and there were photos of swimming pools and backyards falling into the ocean.
"These extreme sea-level events do happen naturally but they used to happen infrequently and the frequency of these events is now increasing.
"The projections are that by 2050, most of the coastlines around Australia will experience what used to be a once-in-a-century ocean flooding event every single year."
Links
- (AU) 5 Australian Women Who Are Solving The Biggest Problems Of Climate Change.
- Welcome To The Feminist Climate Renaissance
- Q&A: Why Women Leading The Climate Movement Are Underappreciated And Sometimes Invisible
- Women Shouldering The Burden Of Climate Crisis Need Action, Not Speeches
- Want To Go For Inclusive Climate Action? Then Start With Integrating Gender Equality Into Climate Finance
- Why The Climate Crisis Is Harming Women More Than Men
- 'You Need To Act Now': Meet 4 Girls Working To Save The Warming World
- Women In Climate Change Hotspots Face Greater Burdens When Under Environmental Stress
- (US) Her Message About Climate Change: It’s Not Too Late
- Our Young Girls Are Bearing The Burden Of Climate Action. But Should They Be?
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