Le Quéré was born in Quebec in 1966 and as a child spent her camping holidays in the national parks of Eastern Canada which fostered her interest in the natural world.[5][6] She left high school in 1984 and enrolled for a course in general studies in a small university near to her home in Gatineau prior to transferring to the University of Montreal to study physics.[6]
Le Quéré later became a British Citizen and holds both French and Canadian passports. She is now married to her second husband and has a daughter from her first marriage, Marianne, who she raised partly as a single mother.[6]
She was co-chair of the Global Carbon Project (GCP) from 2009 until 2013.[9] Within the GCP, she initiated and directed for over a decade the annual publication of the Global Carbon Budget.[10][11] During 2014-2017 she has been a member of the Scientific Committee of the Future Earth platform for sustainability research.[12][4] She is author of the 3rd, 4th and 5th assessment reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. She conducted research at Princeton University in the US (1992–1996), at the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry in Germany (2000–2005), and jointly between the UEA and the British Antarctic Survey in the UK (2005–2010).
Honours and awards
In 2012, Le Quéré was awarded the Claude Berthault award from the French Academy of Sciences,[13] the first Copernicus medal of the Copernicus Gesellschaft e.V. in 2013/2014,[14] and was the annual Bolin lecturer in Stockholm University in 2014.[15]
In 2015, she received a Blaise Pascal Medal for Earth and Environmental Sciences from the European Academy of Sciences[16] and the Grande Médaille Albert 1er de Monaco, Science section.[17]
In 2020, she received the Heineken Prize for Environmental Sciences for her interdisciplinary research on the interactions between climate change and the carbon cycle.[22]
Selected publications
A full list of Le Quéré's peer-reviewed publications can be found on her Publons profile.[23]
Temporary reduction in daily global CO2 emissions during the COVID-19 forced confinement (2020). Le Quéré, C. et al., Nature Climate Change, 10, 647–653, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0797-x.
Role of zooplankton dynamics for Southern Ocean phytoplankton biomass and global biogeochemical cycles (2016). Le Quéré, C. et al., Biogeosciences, 23, 4111-4133, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-13-4111-2016.
Trends in the sources and sinks of carbon dioxide (2009). Le Quéré, C. et al., Nature Geoscience, 6, 831-836, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo689.