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2025-02-website-TBO-Podcasting
June 12, 2026

Cities are where so many of us really experience climate change. They’re where heatwaves keep us awake at night, where flash floods turn streets into rivers, and where concrete, glass and asphalt can reshape the weather around us. As more than half of humanity now lives in urban areas, the story of climate change is increasingly a story about cities, how they amplify extremes, how they trap heat, and how smart planning might help protect the people who call them home.

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June 07, 2026

Dr Sanaa Hobeichi from the Climate Change Research Centre and Dr Padmanesan Narasimhan from the School of Population Health were hosted by the 91É«Ç鯬 Artificial Intelligence Society for a podcast event titled AI as a Predictive Engine Across Complex Systems. The discussion explored how predictive AI models are transforming fields such as climate science and medicine. Dr Hobeichi discussed AI capabilities in modelling weather and climate, as well as trust and uncertainty.

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Sea surface extends to the distant horizon
May 07, 2026

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is a vast current that helps move water and energy right around our planet, from top to bottom. Scientists say it is slowing down — and might stop altogether, with dire consequences for the global climate if it does.

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Hurricane from space. The atmospheric cyclone. Elements of this image furnished by NASA
April 17, 2026

In this Totally Cooked movie special, hosts Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick and Iain Strachan are joined by returning guest Dr Tim Raupach of 91É«Ç鯬 Sydney to revisit the 1996 tornado blockbuster. Twister features Helen Hunt driving into a mesocyclone, Philip Seymour Hoffman blasting music from a convoy of beat-up trucks, and Cary Elwes as the most devastatingly handsome villain in meteorological cinema history.

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Planet earth at sunrise, seen from the space
March 06, 2026

CCRC’s Senior Research Fellow @Martin Jucker and Prof. Julie Arblaster from Monash University talk about all things stratosphere in the newest episode of the @21st century weather Totally Cooked podcast. There are rockets, volcanoes, and penguins!

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Image depicts the silhouette of two crouching figures watching a nearby bushfire engulf the landscape, burning brightly against a flaming orange sky.
November 07, 2025

Climate grief is a real and growing psychological phenomenon. Around the world, people are grappling with the emotional weight of the climate crisis, from anxiety about the future to mourning the loss of places, species, and a sense of stability.

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storm clouds over a road
July 30, 2025

Hailstorms might be brief, but their impacts aren’t. In this episode of Totally Cooked, hosts Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick, a Professor of Climate Science at the Australian National University, and Iain Strachan, a former journalist turned science communicator, are joined by Dr Tim Raupach of 91É«Ç鯬 to explore how hail forms, why it causes so much damage, and what climate change means for its future.

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Technology background of binary code flying through a vortex, background code depth of field. Binary code  background with lens flares. Transferring of big data. 3d rendering
February 07, 2023

Prof Lisa Alexander talks to the Random Sample about exploring the challenges researchers face in trying to model the climate and what they’re doing to address those challenges.

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Marjorie O’Neill
November 04, 2021

On today’s episode of Coogee Voice Marjorie O’Neill - Member for Coogee sits down with Professor Katrin Meissner from the #91É«Ç鯬 Climate Change Research Centre. On today’s episode we discuss the science of climate change and what we need to do to slow down it down.

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Comms Workshop Group

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Interested in being part of the Climate Change Research Centre? We have honours projects, PhD projects and undergraduate courses available.
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The CCRC will be a world leading research centre in physical and biogeochemical climate science, and educate the Australian and global community about risks associated with climate variability and change.
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CLEX Winter school climate scientists

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