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  • Christine Clark

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By:

  • Christine Clark

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Change Agent

Professor and National Geographic ‘Emerging Explorer’ sets out to address food production’s footprint on global climate change

Photo credit: Lennart Woltering

Fieldwork has led Burney to develop technologies to help farmers in Africa adapt to climate change. She helped develop solar irrigation systems that enable African farmers to grow more fruits and vegetables year round. Photo by Lennart Woltering

What are some unforeseen damages caused by air pollution? How do we solve the problems of climate change? How do we feed the billions of people suffering from chronic hunger, and do it without causing further harm to the environment? These are just some of the questions that drive Jennifer Burney.

Burney, a professor at the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IR/PS), conducts research that focuses on simultaneously achieving global food security and mitigating climate change.

“We are a world of plenty, but 800 million or so people still go to bed hungry every night,” she says. “At the same time, the way we produce, distribute and cook food contributes tremendously to climate change. Finding a way to lift the world out of perpetual hunger without creating an even worse climate crisis is an intricate, interwoven problem.”

Burney studies the environmental impacts of food production and consumption and climate impacts on agriculture. A physicist by training, she designs, implements and evaluates technologies for poverty alleviation and agricultural adaptation. Much of her current research focuses on the developing world.

Photo credit: Marshall Burke

A physicist by training, Burney designs, implements and evaluates technologies for poverty alleviation and agricultural adaptation. Much of her current research focuses on the developing world. Photo by Marshall Burke

A trailblazer in the field

Fieldwork has led Burney to develop technologies to help farmers in Africa and Brazil adapt to climate change. “Having more money is not the only thing they need; we have to explore what adaptation looks like,” she says.

In lands baked by sun, Burney makes sunshine the answer. She helped develop solar irrigation systems that enable African and Brazilian farmers to grow more fruits and vegetables year round, boosting nutrition and income. Unlike motorized systems powered by fuel that’s too costly and unreliable, the systems Burney studies require no batteries, gas or kerosene.

In addition to devising methods to help improve food production, which only solves part of the climate equation, Burney looks at how cooking also contributes to the problem. “Cooking uses about 8 percent of global energies,” Burney says. “The biggest footprint comes from developing nations.” To study this often forgotten impact and how to reduce it, she worked on a project in India when she was post doctoral fellow at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Burney and a team of scholars from Scripps replaced highly inefficient, traditional cook stoves in Uttar Pradesh with new more eco-friendly stoves and conducted a series of tests to understand how emissions changed, and how they were linked to larger-scale impacts.

Photo credit: Zacharie Sero Tamou

National Geographic Society named Burney an "Emerging Explorer" in 2011 to support of her work on food security for those living in a warming world, especially on hotter continents. Photo by Zacharie Sero Tamou

“Traditional cook stoves rely on biomass fuels such as wood and dung,” she explains. “Combustion is incomplete, so a lot of black carbon (soot) is emitted. Inside homes, the sooty air causes terrible respiratory infections and cardiovascular problems. Outside, it can alter monsoon cycles, speed glacial melting and almost equal the impact of longer-term greenhouse gasses. In contrast, the improved ventilation and efficiency of fully combusting eco-stoves significantly limit emissions and cut fuel use by up to one half.”  Burney hopes these findings will encourage countries and development groups to invest in green technology.

One of National Geographic’s “Emerging Explorers”

Burney’s groundbreaking research in various and often rural parts of the globe caught the attention of the National Geographic Society, which named Burney an “Emerging Explorer” in 2011 to support of her work on food security for those living in a warming world, especially on hotter continents. For Burney, doing fieldwork on these issues in tough environments is a challenge she welcomes.

“Anybody dealing with climate or poverty, including myself, feels incredibly powerless,” she says. “Though I have always been interested in science and technology, I care about these issues and if my work can make even makes the tiniest difference, that’s tremendous.”

It’s no surprise to Burney that she purses both physics and international development in her work. “I have always wanted to discover how science happens in a social context,” she says. The New Mexico native, who received her bachelor’s degree in history and science from Harvard University and a Ph.D. in physics from Stanford University, volunteered in rural, developing places during and after college.

“I have been fortunate to live in different parts of the world and really see firsthand the seasonal constraints on farmers in places where there are no strong national policies in place,” she says.

Paving the way for public policy to mitigate climate change

Of particular interest to Burney’s current research is the science, technology and policy of short-lived climate pollutants, or SLCPs, and the role that mitigation of these compounds can play in meeting both climate and food security objectives.

Photo credit: Zacharie Sero Tamou

Photo by Zacharie Sero Tamou

“I try to understand how in addition to contributing to climate change, pollutants have real agricultural and health risks,” she says.

In November, a paper Burney co-wrote with Scripps climate scientist Veerabhadran Ramanathan was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The “Recent Climate and Air Pollution Impacts on Indian Agriculture”  study showed a link between climate change and lower crop yields in India. Specifically, their research indicated a majority of losses in yields can be attributed to two short-lived climate pollutants, tropospheric ozone and black carbon—both of which also contribute to climate change.

“Environmental regulation is incomplete at best in the U.S. and other countries, so rather than solely relying on the Environmental Protection Agency to be the only entity to try to enforce regulation, our research can potentially have the backing of more powerful players like the U.S. Department of Agriculture or the U.S. Department of the Treasury, which can hopefully help align the interests of more policymakers to protect the planet,” she says.

Burney says the interdisciplinary nature of her research makes her a great fit for UC San Diego and is one of the reasons she joined the faculty at IR/PS in 2011. She is also a research affiliate at the campus’s Policy Design and Evaluation Laboratory (PDEL).

“When I got here, I immediately felt at home because every single person at IR/PS was doing really complex, question-driven research,” Burney says. “It is really grass roots, interdisciplinary research: sociologists are working with physicists, economists are working with climate scientists. The faculty here really care about important issues. They are motivated by big crucial questions, and there are no boundaries as to how they find the answers.”

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