Author: YAN XIAOLU
Publisher: Nashwa
Publication Date: Jan 01, 2011
Country: Sweden
Language: English
Protection of the marine environment is a current and contemporary issue, the importance of which is not likely to diminish in the near future. It is not only because the oceans are fragile and susceptible to damage but also due to the dependence of human society on the marine environment. The pollution of the marine environment threatens many interests of society in various aspects ranging from existence to recreation. From a macroeconomic standpoint, marine pollution affects the living environment of man. As part of the integrated ecosystem, the marine ecosystem is directly related to the land terrestrial ecosystems and therefore influences the whole environment in which we are living. The pollution of the marine environment is a menace to public health and even the existence of the human race. From a microcosmic point of view, marine pollution threatens natural resources and transport which we depend on. The healthy marine environment guarantees seafood sources which has brought prosperity to the fishing industry and relevant industries as well. Besides food, the marine environment provides other natural resources such as oil and mines when land resources are limited or over-exploited. Marine pollution may have impacts on global shipping and port activities which are the backbone of international trade today. Lastly, the sea provides a place for recreation. The beautiful sight of beaches as well ocean sport never stops attracting people. The range of interests and threat is indeed so vast that the field of marine pollution control might be said to extend from relatively minor, minimally threatening harms at one extreme to potentially catastrophic, genuinely frightening hazards at the other. 1 Legal development is shaped by events. 2 It was shipping activity that first brought marine pollution into the forefront of public concern.
Here's a biographical snapshot of Yan Xiaolu, a Chinese atmospheric scientist specializing in upper-atmospheric and climate research:
Doctor of Meteorology, affiliated with the Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences in Beijing (ResearchGate).
Holds a Postdoctoral research position at the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, since December 2015 (ResearchGate).
Previously worked (March 2016 – March 2020) at the Institute of Energy and Climate Research Stratosphere (IEK‑7), Forschungszentrum Jülich, in Germany (ResearchGate).
Specialized in atmospheric physics, particularly the stratosphere, Asian monsoon dynamics, and troposphere–stratosphere exchange.
Skilled in trace gas & aerosol measurements, studying water vapor, ozone, and Asian monsoon-related transport mechanisms.
Investigates climate processes such as ENSO, QBO, and their interactions with atmospheric composition (ResearchGate).
Prolific author with at least 29 peer‑reviewed publications, including key works on:
Transport into the polar stratosphere from the Asian monsoon region (2024/2025).
Seasonal trace gas dynamics and reanalysis evaluations (ResearchGate).
Exhibits significant academic influence, with several thousand reads and hundreds of citations reported (exaly.com).
Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences, Beijing — current position.
Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences — postdoctoral researcher.
Institute of Energy and Climate Research Stratosphere (IEK‑7), Germany — previous research appointment (ResearchGate).
Yan Xiaolu is a renowned early/mid-career scholar in atmospheric sciences, whose work sheds light on how monsoonal and stratospheric exchange processes influence climate and atmospheric composition. Her collaborations span China and major European research centers, contributing to global understanding of environmental change.
Would you like details on any specific publications or her contributions to particular climate models or policies?