Observing Africa’s climate
All around the planet, high-frequency climate observatories are
collecting atmospheric data around the clock as part of the Advanced
Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment (AGAGE), a 35-year-old project to
study emissions and climate change.
But there’s one problem: Despite a network of observatories that
covers much of the globe, AGAGE lacks data on Africa — the world’s
second-largest continent.
That’s something that Jimmy Gasore, along with other scientists, is
trying to change. Gasore, a fourth-year graduate student in MIT’s
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences under Ronald G.
Prinn, the TEPCO Professor of Atmospheric Science, is working with
research scientist Katherine Potter to build the first high-frequency
climate observatory in all of Africa.
Once finished, the observatory will sit atop Mount Karisimbi, on the
border between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, at an
elevation of nearly 15,000 feet. (Climate observatories are often built
at high elevations so that researchers can cast a wider net, collecting
data from a much larger surrounding region.) For now, it’s located at
about half that elevation, on Mount Mugogo in Rwanda — making for more
efficient work, since the hike up Karisimbi takes two days.
It’s a project that will fill a large hole in our current
understanding of emissions of greenhouse gases — especially those coming
from agricultural activities, wildfires, and deforestation. This will
lead not only to better climate predictions, but also support regional
and global climate-change mitigation strategies.
It’s also a highly personal project for Gasore, a citizen of Rwanda.
“We don’t know about African emissions, and we don’t have enough
studies in Africa,” Gasore says. “It’s worth doing this study that has
the potential to actually change people’s lives. It’s very gratifying to
do research that actually affects people.”
Doing what felt right
Growing up in a village in southwestern Rwanda, Gasore used to watch
the shadow cast by his house to predict when his mother would come home
each day from her job as a schoolteacher — the first time he ever felt
like he was really using science.
Gasore was also innately fascinating with how things worked: He was
transfixed when he saw mechanics poking around car engines, and would
stare as they struggled with the machinery.
“Even today I can watch road work, and tractors, for hours,” he says.
His father was trained as a nurse, but ran an electronics repair
shop, fixing radios and televisions. Just from hanging around his
father’s shop, a young Gasore learned about electronics by tinkering.
School wasn’t mandatory in Rwanda when Gasore was growing up, but his
parents put a heavy emphasis on education for him and his five
siblings. He learned to read French when he was 5, but didn’t attend
school until he was 7. His father soon started to bring him books on
computers and physics.
It just so happened that he had a knack for school — and for math, in
particular. At the end of his primary schooling, Gasore was the best
student in his district, and then placed third in a nationwide
examination. He was awarded a scholarship to the National University of
Rwanda, where he studied theoretical physics, graduating first in his
class in 2007.
After finishing college, Gasore reached a crossroads. He stayed at
the university and worked as a teaching assistant, but could feel
himself growing disenchanted with the ethereal world of theoretical
physics.
“When I finished I found that I wasn’t well connected with the real
world,” he says. “I knew things, but couldn’t actually talk to people
and tell them what I knew.”
Gasore was interested in climate science because it offered a mix of
the theoretical and the practical. “I love using my theoretical
knowledge on real-life problems,” he says.
Before long, an opportunity came knocking. Gasore was familiar with
MIT, and the National University of Rwanda had partnerships with the
Institute through OpenCourseWare and iLab. When Potter — now his
colleague — came to visit Rwanda as part of her research, Gasore asked
to meet her.
Potter was impressed with Gasore’s interests and intelligence, and
advised him to apply to MIT. He did, and was accepted. The following
fall, he moved to Boston.
Carving a path at MIT
Initially, Gasore was surprised by the freedom he found at MIT: “My
previous school was sitting in a class and having someone teach you what
to do. So I liked getting to choose what I got to study — to have 20
options for classes and to get to choose four.”
He quickly immersed himself in student opportunities surrounding his
studies, joining the Weather Forecasting Team, the Joint Program on the
Science and Policy of Global Change, and the Center for Global Change
Science. Recently, he was also awarded a Martin Family Fellowship for
Sustainability, which supports MIT graduate students in environmental
studies.
Gasore realizes the importance of being able to talk to policymakers.
“Policy meetings are about climate-change mitigation and emissions
abatement. So you have to talk in those terms,” he says. “I think the
Center for Global Change Science is very strong in emphasizing strong
mathematical skills, but also keeping in mind that we are doing this for
policy.”
Above all, Gasore is passionate about his work: “I enjoy doing it.
That’s the motivation. That’s why I can spend the night here in the lab
troubleshooting,” he says. “There’s a reward when you spend five hours
on something and then at the end you see it working and you say, ‘Wow.’
That’s what keeps me going.”






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