Hi folks,

For the past 18 months the Degrees Initiative has been pretty quiet on here 
while we were working behind the scenes to transform from a virtual project 
to an independent NGO. We’re now ramping up our programmatic and comms work 
again, starting with an exciting announcement of a new cohort of Global 
South SRM research teams - see below.

First, for those of you who don’t know us, the Degrees Initiative is an NGO 
that seeks to build the capacity of developing countries to evaluate SRM. 
We are impartial on whether SRM should ever be used and how it should be 
governed, but we believe that the climate-vulnerable countries of the 
Global South should play a central role in research, discussion and 
decision-making.  

We have been working for 12 years and for most of this time we were known 
as the SRM Governance Initiative or SRMGI. We have run more than 25 engagement 
workshops <https://www.degrees.ngo/events/> in the Global South. Through 
the Degrees Modelling Fund (DMF, formerly the DECIMALS Fund), we support 
teams of scientists in developing countries who want to explore how SRM 
could affect the climate in their regions.  The DMF is run as a partnership 
between the Degrees Initiative and TWAS <http://twas.org>, and many of the 
world’s leading SRM modellers volunteer their time as research collaborators 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-research-collaborators/> for the DMF 
because they believe in its capacity-building mission.  

Through the first DMF call for proposals in 2018, Degrees supported 11 SRM 
modelling teams, including the first SRM research projects in:

   - 
   
   South America
   - 
   
   The Caribbean
   - 
   
   Africa
   - 
   
   The Middle East
   - 
   
   Southeast Asia
   - 
   
   Small Island Developing States
   - 
   
   Least Developed Countries
   
Scientists from the 2018 grant round have been changing the face of SRM 
research—presenting their findings at international conferences, 
contributing to reports on SRM, and even giving TED Talks about it.

Fifteen new SRM research teams in the Global South

Today we are announcing 15 new DMF research teams across Africa, Asia and 
South America, which more than doubles the number of Southern research 
teams that are exploring SRM. The new teams are based in Benin 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/benin-2023/>, Brazil 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/brazil-2023/>, Cameroon 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/cameroon-2023/>, Chile 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/chile-2023/>, Ghana 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/ghana-2023/>, India 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/india-2023/>, Indonesia 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/indonesia-2023/>, Malaysia 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/malaysia-2023/>, Mali 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/mali-2023/>, Nigeria 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/nigera-2023/>, Pakistan 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/pakistan-2023/>, South Africa 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/#africa> (x2), Thailand 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/dmf/the-projects/thailand-2023/%20>, and Uganda 
<https://www.degrees.ngo/uganda-2023/>. So to date the DMF has supported 26 
modelling projects in 21 different countries, involving over 150 
scientists. This makes the Degrees Modelling Fund the largest SRM research 
initiative in the world.

The impact of the DMF.  In blue are the countries with SRM research 
projects before 2018. In orange, countries in the Global South where new 
research projects have been funded through the DMF since 2018.

As ever with DMF grants, the new research teams were free to define their 
own research questions and funding selections were based on independent 
peer review. The new projects will now begin their research to better 
understand how SRM could affect, among other things, water stress in 
Central Africa, the retreat of Andean glaciers, or species loss amongst 
land-based mammals. Go check out their project pages, there are some really 
interesting new studies in there.

We’ll be posting more regular updates from now on, but if you want to stay 
in touch with our work, we’re on Twitter (@DegreesNGO 
<https://twitter.com/DegreesNGO>) and LinkedIn 
<https://www.linkedin.com/company/degrees-initiative/>, and you can sign up 
to our newsletter <https://www.degrees.ngo/sign-up/>. 

Andy


Andy Parker
Founder and CEO - The Degrees Initiative
www.degrees.ngo

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