Dear all,

We are hosting an online panel about recent and devastating extreme climate 
events, the role of science in modelling, predicting and responding to these 
events, and how science can inform and support response and replanning efforts. 
Modeling Climate Change: Towards more harmonious and resilient human 
settlements 

The event is online and open to all, and details about how to join are included 
below. 

We hope to see you there.

Aline Villavicencio (Institute for Data Science and Artificial Intelligence, 
University of Exeter, and University of Sheffield, UK) 
Marco Idiart (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)
On behalf of the organising committee

———————————————

Modeling Climate Change: Towards more harmonious and resilient human 
settlements 

Date: September 27, 2024, 3pm UK  
Website: https://sites.google.com/view/climate-change-southern-brazil  
Location: Join the Zoom Meeting 
<https://universityofexeter.zoom.us/j/91435912802?pwd=KC4M7HxkKljx8HJb3sE23H9M2nwMtw.1>
 
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/j/91435912802?pwd=KC4M7HxkKljx8HJb3sE23H9M2nwMtw.1
 
Meeting ID: 914 3591 2802 
Password: 164009 
 
Human settlements alter the course of rivers, narrow their banks, and eliminate 
forests and wetlands, ecosystems that retain water and allow its absorption 
into the soil. For decades or even centuries, it was possible to avoid natural 
disasters simply by erecting protective barriers to prevent the waters from 
returning to their natural beds. On the other hand, global warming destabilizes 
the climate and increases the frequency of extreme weather events such as 
excessive rainfall and floods. This makes the protections for villages and 
cities less effective, leading to major climatic disasters as observed in 
southern Brazil. There is consensus that the frequency and severity of these 
events will tend to increase in coming years, and therefore, we must consider 
what kind of planning we should make for the future. Either we continue to 
build increasingly larger dams, dikes and barriers, or we need to rethink human 
occupation of territories. In this panel, we discuss how to replan or relocate 
climate affected settlements, making them more harmonious with nature and 
resilient to climatic effects, and how data science and artificial intelligence 
can assist us in this. 

A Discussion with: 

Ricardo Campos (University of Exeter, UK)  
Marina Hirota (Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil)  
Tiago de Melo Cartaxo (University of Exeter, UK) 
Marcia Zilli (University of Oxford, UK) 
Moderator: Ronaldo Menezes (University of Exeter, UK)
 
More information is available on the website 
<https://sites.google.com/view/climate-change-southern-brazil?usp=sharing>; 
registration is not required.

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