when Manabe received the
Order of Culture) Manabe is a member of the
United States National Academy of Sciences, and a foreign member of Japan Academy,
Academia Europaea and the
Royal Society of Canada. In 1992, Manabe was the first recipient of the Blue Planet Prize of the Asahi Glass Foundation. In 1995, he received the Asahi Prize from Asahi News-Cultural Foundation. In 1997 Manabe was awarded the Volvo Environmental Prize from the Volvo Foundation. In 2015 he was awarded the Benjamin Franklin Medal of Franklin Institute. Manabe has also been honored with the
American Meteorological Society's
Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal, the Second Half Century Award, and the Clarence Leroy Meisinger Award. In addition, he is honored with the
American Geophysical Union's William Bowie Medal and Revelle Medal, and in 1998 received the
Milutin Milankovic Medal from the
European Geophysical Society. Manabe and Bryan's work in the development of the first
global climate models has been selected as one of the Top Ten Breakthroughs to have occurred in
NOAA's first 200 years. In honor of his retirement from
NOAA /
GFDL, a three-day scientific meeting was held in
Princeton, New Jersey in March 1998. "Understanding Climate Change: A Symposium in honor of Syukuro Manabe". The 2005 annual meeting of
American Meteorological Society included a special Suki Manabe Symposium. Jointly with climatologist
James Hansen, Manabe received the
BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in the Climate Change category in the ninth edition (2016) of the awards. The two laureates were separately responsible for constructing the first computational models with the power to simulate climate behavior. Decades ago, they correctly predicted how much Earth's temperature would rise due to increasing atmospheric . The scores of models currently in use to chart climate evolution are heirs to those developed by Manabe and Hansen. In 2018, Manabe received the
Crafoord Prize in Geosciences jointly with
Susan Solomon "for fundamental contributions to understanding the role of atmospheric trace gases in Earth's climate system". In 2021, he received the
Order of Culture. In 2022, Manabe was named by
Carnegie Corporation of New York as an honoree of the
Great Immigrants Awards.
The Nobel Prize In 2021, one half of the
Nobel Prize in Physics was shared between Manabe and
Klaus Hasselmann "for the physical modeling of Earth's climate, quantifying variability and reliably predicting global warming".
Shuji Nakamura, the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physics awardee who also came from
Ehime Prefecture and immigrated to the United States, congratulated Manabe on 6 October. == Selected publications ==