Rachel McCarthy

Last updated

Rachel McCarthy
Rachel McCarthy profile.jpg
McCarthy photographed by The Guardian, 2015
Born
Rachel Elizabeth McCarthy

(1984-07-31) 31 July 1984 (age 39)
Preston, Lancashire, England
Education
Alma mater University College, Durham (BSc, PhD)
Occupations
  • climatologist
  • poet
  • essayist
  • broadcaster
Years active2006–present
Notable work
Element (2015)

Alphabet of Our Universe (2016)

Awards
  • Laureate's Choice (2015)
Website www.rachelmccarthy.com

Rachel McCarthy (born 31 July 1984) is a British scientist, poet and broadcaster.

Contents

Early life and education

Rachel Elizabeth McCarthy was born in Preston, Lancashire. She was educated at St Mary's Catholic Primary School in Leyland, Leyland St Mary's Catholic High School and studied six A-levels at Runshaw College, Leyland. She studied Natural Sciences at Durham University as a member of University College. She graduated in 2006 with double first class honours in Chemistry and Physics, later completing a doctorate in climatology.

Career

In 2008, she joined the Met Office soon becoming a Senior Climate Scientist, specialising in Climate Impacts and Disaster Risk Reduction. In 2010, she was seconded to London to advise the UK Government Department of Energy and Climate Change on policy matters relating to weather and climate, including renewable energy provision. On her return to the Met Office she worked as Private Secretary to the Met Office Chief Scientist Prof. Dame Julia Slingo and became the first to hold the post of Expert Scientist in Communications.[ citation needed ]. She was contributor to and editor responsible for the Met office Hadley Centre's contributions to Sir John Houghton's 5th edition of Global Warming:the complete briefing. [1] [2]

In 2009, she established ExCite Poetry, [3] the Devon arm of the UK Poetry Society. Within six months of its formation, ExCite Poetry became the largest regional arm of the Poetry Society by a significant margin with well over 200 members and was consequently the focus of the first of a series of poetry workshops with Ruth Padel on BBC Radio 4. [4] Between 2009 and 2013, she co-hosted a monthly arts-review show on Phonic FM, [5] hailed by The Sunday Times as "providing some of the most inspiring broadcasting in the country". [6] In 2013, she became Director of the Exeter Poetry Festival. [7]

In 2015 McCarthy won the first Laureate's Choice Award. [8] In 2016 she converted the research behind the book into a one-woman multimedia experience called 'Alphabet of Our Universe' with numerous shows across the UK and an exclusive interview with McCarthy in The Guardian on Alphabet's Oxford premiere. [9] [10]

The same year she was appointed as an Expert for the European Commission, to advise on the scientific validity of projects submitted under the EU's H2020 Climate Programme; the biggest EU Research and Innovation programme ever with nearly €80 billion of funding available over 7 years (2014 to 2020). [11]

Honours and awards

In 2015, she was chosen by Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy as one of four of the most exciting new voices in British poetry that year. Her first pamphlet "Element" was published in June 2015 by Smith Doorstop under the imprint of Laureate's Choice, [12] taking its impetus from the naming and properties of the transition metals of the periodic table. The Laureates Choice scheme continued for a further four years and to celebrate the culmination of Carol Ann Duffy's tenure as Poet Laureate eight of McCarthy's poems and an interview were published in 'The Laureate's Choice Anthology' in 2019, which anthologised the work of all twenty 'exciting and eclectic new voices in contemporary verse'. [13]

Published works

Poetry

Scientific papers

Articles and essays

Related Research Articles

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References

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  9. Fleming, Interview by Amy (11 January 2016). "Rachel McCarthy: the climate change scientist and poet unlocking elemental forces". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  10. "Moseley Event: Alphabet of Our Universe by Rachel McCarthy". 12 January 2016. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  11. "Horizon 2020" . Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  12. "Smith Doorstop". Smith Doorstopl. 1 February 2015. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
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  14. The Laureate's Choice Anthology - Twenty poets chosen by Carol Ann Duffy. poetrybusiness.co.uk. 5 October 2019. ISBN   978-1-912196-76-0 . Retrieved 9 December 2019.
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  25. Palin, Erika J.; Thornton, Hazel E.; Mathison, Camilla T.; McCarthy, Rachel E.; Clark, Robin T.; Dora, John (2013). "Future projections of temperature-related climate change impacts on the railway network of Great Britain". Climatic Change. 120 (1–2): 71–93. Bibcode:2013ClCh..120...71P. doi:10.1007/s10584-013-0810-8. S2CID   154169860.
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