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World Climate Research Programme Open Science Conference Gilbert Brunet WWRP/JSC Chair. CAS MG meeting, 15-17 November 2011 Madrid, Spain. WCRP Open Science Conference 24-28 October 2011 Denver, Colorado, USA http://conference2011.wcrp-climate.org.
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World Climate Research ProgrammeOpen Science Conference Gilbert BrunetWWRP/JSC Chair CAS MG meeting, 15-17 November 2011 Madrid,Spain
WCRP Open Science Conference 24-28 October 2011 Denver, Colorado, USA http://conference2011.wcrp-climate.org Promoting, Facilitating and Coordinating Climate Research in Service to Society
WCRP Open Science Conference • Assembly of WCRP affiliated researchers and partners (~1900 participants) • Exclusive opportunity for exchange and collaboration across diverse research communities (e.g., WCRP, WWRP, IGBP, IHDP, …) working to advance understanding and prediction of climate variability and change across scales • The Conference has: • Appraise current state of climate science ( IPCC AR5) • Identify most urgent scientific issues and research • challenges • Ascertain how WCRP can best facilitate research and • develop partnerships critical for progress • Facilitate growth of future, diverse workforce http://conference2011.wcrp-climate.org
WCRP Open Science Conference • International Scientific Committee • Jim Hurrell, Chair, NCAR, USA • Ghassem Asrar, WCRP, Switzerland • Sandrine Bony, LMD/IPSL, France • Tony Busalacchi, ESSIC/U. Md, USA • Christian Jakob, Monash U., Australia • Rik Leemans, ESSP Chair, Netherlands • Jerry Meehl, NCAR, USA • Terry Nakajima, U. Tokyo, Japan • Carlos Nobre, IGBP Chair, Brazil • Ted Shepherd, Univ. Toronto, Canada • Julia Slingo, MetOffice, UK • Koni Steffen, Univ. Colorado, USA • Kevin Trenberth, NCAR, USA • Carolina Vera, Univ. Buenos Aires, Argentina • Martin Visbeck, IFM-GEOMAR, Germany http://conference2011.wcrp-climate.org
WCRP Open Science Conference • 1900+ registered participants of which: • 300 students • 200 early career scientis of which 250 are sponsored • 2100 abstracts submitted • 190 oral presentations, // sessions • 20 plenary presentations • 84 countries represented
Some WCRP OSC highlights • Although the focus was on climate change, seamless weather-climate connections were emphasized throughout; • WWRP has participated in many of the WCRP programs that were highlighted, such as GEWEX, CLIVAR and SPARC; • Jarraud spoke of many exemplary weather-climate collaborations such as GARP, GATE, FGGE, CGOS and JCOMM.
Some WCRP OSC highlights • Jarraud stressed that users need concrete information for services and decision support systems related to the frequency and severity of extreme events and the associated risks; • Jakob, co-chair of the WMO Working Group on Numerical Experimentation (WGNE), pointed out that numerical weather prediction has effectively revolutionized the world by producing a sustained one day per decade rate of improvement in the accuracy of weather forecasts, but this has gone largely unnoticed.
Some WCRP OSC highlights • Jacob advocated in concordance with WWRP (a?) major coordinated international model development project (s?) with associated super-computer facilities to help catch up with the accelerating need for accurate earth system information for weather and climate in a changing environment; • The links between weather and climate time scales were also discussed through examples of high impact weather events and their attribution to a changing climate.
Some WCRP OSC highlights • Numerous presentations were made by users who need weather and climate information for applications in water supply, food supply, insurance, health, economics, energy, and security; • Some panellists expressed frustration with all the talk of uncertainty, together with acknowledging the need for better education on probabilistic products emphasizing likelihoods rather than uncertainty.
Session B1Prediction from sub-seasonal to multi-decadal scales (conveners: D. Anderson, G. Brunet, B. Kirtman, I.-S. Kang)
Main findings • Weather to Sub-seasonal to Decadal is the foundation for seamless prediction; • Some prediction skill at subseasonal-seasonal-interannual and decadal scales; • Land surface initialization can improve skill; • Tropical SST trends: observed patterns are poorly simulated in coupled models, AMIP simulations agree with climate response; • Predictive skill increased under specific regimes and not others.
WCRP Research andEmerging Challenges Gaps • Multi-models ensembles and stochastic parameterization; • Prediction of changes in tropical SST; • Prediction metrics; • Decadal prediction building on CMIP5; • Need for better initialization schemes for coupled atmosphere-ocean; • A better understanding of the modulation of high-impact weather by the low frequency variability; • Importance to understand the mid-latitude and tropical interactions.
Conclusions (1/2) • Urgent need for actionable climate information based on sound science; • “actionable science” emerged as the mantra; • Environment/climate related issues and concerns that the public and decision makers are facing are complex and require trans-disciplinary approach to address them.
Conclusions (2/2) • The need for “symbiotic” relationship between providers and users of climate information to ensure ‘actionable’ climate information is developed and used effectively: timely, accessible, easy to understand; • Urgent need for training and development of next generation of scientists and decision makers who pursue and promote the use of actionable climate/environmental information. • What is the role of the NMHSs?
Thank you for your attention! http://www.wcrp-climate.org