Give Online Now
External Links
About Missoula

alt="CFC Logo - Where Ideas Take Flight"

CFC Professor Steve Running Honored with Share of Nobel Peace Prize

picture of a tvView Dr. Running's lecture on Climate Change (Video and audio)

picture of earphonesListen to Dr. Running's lecture on Climate Change (Audio only. mp3 format)

Nobel Peace Prize MedalThe University of Montana gets to share a piece of the Nobel Peace Prize that was awarded to Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

That’s because UM ecologist and forestry Professor Steve Running, one of the nation’s foremost experts on climate change, was a lead author of the 2007 United Nations IPCC report, which presents strong evidence that humanity is artificially warming our world.

“This is such an unimaginable honor, and I’m just stunned,” Running said. “Nobody on the IPCC committee expected the award because a Nobel Peace Prize has never gone to a committee before.”

Steve RunningRunning was nominated by the U.S. government in May 2004 to be a lead author of the chapter on North American impacts in the current IPCC report. His U.S. working group author team then met in Austria, Australia, Mexico and South Africa over the next two and a half years, and the report was unveiled in Brussels in April 2007. His group was among 180 IPCC member nations that helped prepare the report, which is available online at http://www.ipcc.ch.

Running and the other authors were e-mailed a letter Friday morning from IPCC Chair Rajendra Pachauri that said, “I have been stunned in a pleasant way with the news of the award of the Nobel Peace Prize for the IPCC. This makes each of you a Nobel Laureate, and it is my privilege to acknowledge this honor on your behalf.”

Running has worked for UM since 1979. He directs the College of Forestry and Conservation’s Numerical Terradynamic Simulation Group, which has crafted software for NASA environmental satellites such as Terra and Aqua. He also travels extensively to speak with groups across the nation about climate change.

The only other UM faculty member associated with the Nobel is Harold Urey (1893-1981), who received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1934 for his discovery of heavy hydrogen, also called deuterium.

UM President George Dennison said Running's share of the honor further demonstrates the quality of work done by faculty on the Missoula campus.

"We have world-class faculty at The University of Montana conducting monumental research," Dennison said. "We couldn't be more excited for Professor Running or proud of his significant accomplishments."

“I never thought my name and the words ‘Nobel Laureate’ would ever be used in the same sentence,” Running said. “I really hope this award will help bury the disingenuous climate change deniers once and for all.

“We as a society badly need to move to solutions,” he said. “We have no more time for arguing about petty details while huge climate changes occur before our eyes. We need to get society to calmly acknowledge these climate facts and get to work.”

Running suggests people read his “Five Stages of Climate Grief” essay at http://www.ntsg.umt.edu/files/5StagesClimateGrief.htm.

OCT. 12, 2007