Sponsored by The Center for Applied
Christian Ethics

Sir
John Houghton
Tuesday,
January 23rd
(Audio/Video Downloads)
Environment and Politics
Class Lecture, Armerding Lecture Hall (mp3)
Lecture Q & A
(mp3)
Wednesday, January 24th
Pastor’s Breakfast with
Sir John. Co-sponsored with Chaplains Office (mp3)
Chapel Message by Sir John Houghton, visit www.wetn.org
10:30 AM, Edman Chapel
Plenary Session: "Climate Change: A Challenge
to Scientists and Christians”
Audio Only (mp3)
Slides
and Audio (M4v plays in iTunes and some Quicktime versions)
Printed
Materials courtesy of John Ray Institute
Big
Science, Big God. (pdf)
"Global
Warming, Climate Change and Sustainability"
(pdf)
Biography
John
Houghton was born in 1931 in Dyserth, Clwyd, educated at Rhyl Grammar
School, entering Jesus College, Oxford as a scholar in 1948, obtaining
MA and D.Phil in 1955. After a short period at the Royal Aircraft Establishment,
he returned to Oxford in 1958 as Lecturer, Reader (1962) and Professor
(1976) of Atmospheric Physics, where he became involved, in cooperation
with Professor Desmond Smith, then at Reading University, in devising
novel instrumentation mounted on NASA satellites for measuring the global
structure of temperature and composition of the stratosphere and mesosphere
(altitudes from 10-90 km). After a period on leave from Oxford as Director
of the Appleton Laboratory (1979-1983), during which it merged with
the Rutherford Laboratory at Chilton, he moved to become Director General
(later Chief Executive) of the Meteorological Office. There he took
a particular interest in research into human induced climate change
and in 1988, on the formation of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, was appointed chairman of its Scientific Assessment –
a position he held until 2002. After retiring from the Met Office in
1991, he became chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution
(1992-8) and in 1997 the Chairman of the John Ray Initiative, a charity
formed to connect science, environment and Christianity in the promotion
of environmental sustainability. He continues to lecture widely on climate
change, the underlying science and the challenge it presents to all
human communities. His many awards include the Japan Prize (2006), International
Meteorological Organisation Prize (1998) gold medals from the Royal
Astronomical Society and the Royal Meteorological Society. His books
include The Physics of Atmospheres, Global Warming: the Complete Briefing,
Does God play dice? and The search for God: can science help. He now
lives in Aberdyfi, Wales where he enjoys sailing and mountain walking.