/Potential-of-Wetlands-to-Mitigate-Climate-Change

Visualization project to show the potential of wetlands to mitigate climate change based on multiple open data sources

Primary LanguageJupyter NotebookOtherNOASSERTION

The Potential of Wetlands to Mitigate Climate Change

Introduction

Climate change is one of the biggest and most complex challenges of our time. To combat it, we need to drastically reduce our greenhouse gas emissions: the EU has set the goal to cut the GHG emissions by at least 55% by 2030, and to reach net neutrality by 2050 - a task which is still facing a variety of problems. The natural environment plays a vital role in this endeavour: forests, agroecosystems, marine and other ecosystems offer many and varied benefits to us and the planet. One of those major ecosystems are wetlands which slowly begin to take a larger part in public discussions for their high capability to act as carbon sinks.

By illustrating the capacity of wetlands to act as carbon sinks and store significant amounts of greenhouse gases, this visualization project emphasizes their potential in reducing atmospheric concentrations and combating climate change.

This project has been executed in the course of the "Data Visualization and Visual Analytics" module of the FH Kiel in the summer term 2023.

Getting Started

The visualization project is realized inside a Jupyter notebook with Altair as a visualization library. It can be found in the root folder of this project: notebook.ipynb.

The notebook has been tested under Python 3.10.11 installed in a Conda environment and has the following dependencies:

  • Pandas
  • GeoPandas
  • Altair

For the data, the notebook assumes that all datasets are stored in the data subfolder. See the Readme.md there for further details.

The results containing the visual story with images are stored in the results subfolder.

Data Sources and References

This project is based on a variety of public and open data sources of third parties including statistical and geospatial data. Additionally, latest academic research is taken into account to determine the concrete carbon sink potential of different ecosystems.