Tag: University of Oxford

  • Urgent warning as Europe swept by searing heatwaves

    Urgent warning as Europe swept by searing heatwaves

    If the world misses its crucial goal to limit global warming by 1.5C, the number of days Brits suffer in uncomfortable heat would rise by over a third.

    According to recent University of Oxford research, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and Norway will experience the world’s most pronounced relative increase in days that call for cooling interventions like window shutters, ventilation, fans, or air conditioning.

    Northern Europe is anticipated to host eight of the top ten nations with the biggest relative increase in uncomfortable temperatures, with Canada and New Zealand rounding out the group.

    Switzerland and the UK will see a 30% increase in days with uncomfortably hot temperatures if the world heats to 2ºC, while Norway will see an increase of 28%.

    This is a conservative estimate and does not consider extreme events like heatwaves, which would come on top of this average increase.

    The researchers believe these countries are dangerously underprepared for this change.

    Latest London news

    ‘Right now, for example, sustainable cooling barely has a mention in the UK’s net zero strategy,’ said the study’s co-author Dr Radhika Khosla.

    ‘Without adequate interventions to promote sustainable cooling we are likely to see a sharp increase in the use of energy guzzling systems like air conditioning, which could further increase emissions and lock us into a vicious cycle of burning fossil fuels to make us feel cooler while making the world outside hotter.’

    ‘If we adapt the built environment in which we live, we won’t need to increase air conditioning. But right now, in countries like the UK, our buildings act like greenhouses – no external protection from the sun in buildings, windows locked, no natural ventilation and no ceiling fans. Our buildings are exclusively prepared for the cold seasons.’ explained co-lead author Dr Jesus Lizana.

    Some of the solutions proposed for retrofitting buildings were to introduce ventilation measures that could also be closed off to keep in heat during winter and extendable shading covers such as awnings or more trees next to buildings to reflect the suns rays.

    The researchers also suggested having personal fans that cool only the space occupied by people and not entire rooms that are empty, or for buildings where air condition is necessary, installing a heat pump that can cool in summer and warm in winter.

    The top ten countries that will experience the highest needs for cooling overall in a 2.0ºC scenario are all in Africa, with central Africa most affected.

    ‘These conditions will pose further stress to the continent’s socio-economic development and energy networks… issues that require much additional research given the limited studies of this rising threat in the African context,’ said Dr Khosla.

    ‘It is also a clear indication that Africa is bearing the brunt of a problem they did not create, which should further strengthen calls for climate justice and equity.’

  • Former President Kufuor receives recognition and honor from Oxford University

    Former President Kufuor receives recognition and honor from Oxford University

    The University of Oxford‘s Exeter College has paid tribute to its alumni, former President John Agyekum Kufuor, by unveiling two artworks featuring his photograph within the college premises.

    The two commissioned works of art—a photographic portrait and an oil painting – will decorate the hall of an 18th-century building, Cohen Quad, and the medieval 1600s dining hall of the college.

    The artworks by the British photographer Fran Monks and the Tunisian-Belgian oil painter Naima Aouni were inaugurated and unveiled by the historian and Rector of the College, Sir Rick Trainor last Tuesday.

     The event was attended by a galaxy of patrons that included the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, and his wife Lady Julia, as well as Lord Boateng of the British House of Lords, Ghana’s High Commissioner to the UK, Papa Owusu-Ankomah, Ghanaian and other African Ambassadors in Europe and family members of President Kufuor.

     Sir Trainor said the over 700-year college and the university was proud of Mr Kufuor as one of its best-known alumni.

    He said the former President had also joined the founders and distinguished individuals through the hanging of his portraits.

    The Rector said Mr Kufuor had become a rare individual to have received such honours after his Honorary Fellowship under Rector Frances Cairncross.

    He also praised the commissioned planning team that over the last two years worked on the event.

    The team included the Director of Development and Alumni Relations at the College, Yvonne Rainy;  Historian and  Mr Kufuor’s biographer, Ivor Agyeman-Duah, and the Alumni Relations and Events Officer, Amelia Crosse.

    Humility

    Later at a Fidelity Bank-hosted dinner, the Asantehene said Mr Kufuor humbled  himself to the service of the country as President and that the pride Ghanaians had of him and the recognition he had received at the college, the university and around the world was squarely to do with his humility.

     “He never changed before he became president, never changed during his presidency and remains the same after his presidency, “he stated.
     

    Gratitude

    Former President Kufuor said he never expected such an honour over half a century after he left Oxford where he had met his wife who, he regretted, could not be present because of ill health.

    Placement value

    Mr Agyeman-Duah, whose book, “Art and the Power of Goodness- A Collection of John Agyekum Kufuor,” with a foreword by former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, was later autographed by former President Kufuor for the Asantehene and other VIPs of the day, explained that the significance of “art in the University’s ancient traditions dated to its founding.

    He said the commissioning of Mr Kufuor’s portraits in the almost sacred dining hall of the college amid the pantheon of intellectual gods of 700 years ago showed its placement value on the alumnus, Kufuor.

    “For centuries to come, that portrait will resonate among the million who will see it,” he added.