🌧️ 🛩️ The Atmospheric River Reconnaissance program is going global! The program, led by @CW3E_Scripps and @NOAA, will be joining forces and taking flight with research programs across the world to improve forecasts of extreme weather events. Learn more. ⬇️
https://t.co/3SLBR2W1RF
Congratulations Kai, for leading this effort connecting how the stratosphere and #QBO influences #AtmosphericRivers.
A great step in understanding sources of #predictability for these weather features!
🙌Our new paper is out! We find significant stratospheric Quasibiennial Oscillation influences on the global atmospheric river activities around the year. Wanna see more details and find out why? Go check our paper here: https://t.co/Pk3khu3Rdb.
Our fantastic 2020 Fellow @GalacticKirsten is at @sxsw talking about "transformative solutions for a sustainable future." Check out just how fantastic her work is in this talk from our Toronto Summit and get along to the @sxsw event, Austin, March 11 https://t.co/CyqXqUUvpr
Antarctic ice plays a crucial role in regulating Earth’s climate, global sea levels, ocean circulation, and planetary reflectivity.
Learn more in a new #ScienceReview: https://t.co/S4SEy7cbAv
A storm will bring rain and high-elevation snow to Southern CA this weekend into early next week. Higher-intensity rainfall in thunderstorms could lead to localized flash flooding and debris flows in recent burn scars.
See our latest quick look for more information: https://t.co/YB5Xt2633O.
🌍 Meet Christine Shields (@catswx), a Project Scientist at @UCAR_News, working at the intersection of climate and weather in Boulder, CO. She’s one of AGU’s community members at #COP29! #AGUatCOP
TERI and UCAR (@UCAR_News) organized a side event ‘Global Risk Resilience Discourse and Adaptation’ at COP29 in Baku today.
The event brought together scientists and policy makers to reflect on the adequacy of the scope and strategies that have emerged from the negotiation process and explore the ways in which the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) can be truly global in its ambition.
The event began with Ms Suruchi Bhadwal (@SuruchiBhadwal), Director, TERI and Dr Ronnie Abolafia-Rosenzweig, Scientist, NSF NCAR (@NCAR_Science) delivering framing presentations.
While Dr Abolafia-Rosenzweig focused on intersections between #climatescience and climate adaptation, Ms Bhadwal argued for expanding the scope of the #GGA by bringing in global drivers of national adaptive capacities within its purview.
A discussion paper 'A Transformative Global Goal on Adaptation: Scope, Science, and Policy' with contributions from Ms Bhadwal, Dr Manish Kumar Shrivastava (@manishipta) of TERI, and Dr Abolafia-Rosenzweig, Dr Christine A. Shields (@catswx), and Dr Mari Tye of UCAR was also launched at the event.
This was followed by a panel discussion on ‘Science-Policy Interaction at Scale for Transformative Global Goal on Adaptation’.
The panel discussion was moderated byMs Bernadette Woods Placky (@BernWoodsPlacky), Vice President and Chief Meteorologist, Climate Central, and Mr RR Rashmi, Distinguished Fellow, TERI.
Mr Anand Patwardhan (@patwardhan_a), Professor, University of Maryland, School of Public Policy (@UMDPublicPolicy) said, “I'd like to kind of flag three opportunities that I see for the GGA to play a more transformative role for adaptation. If you look at the UNEP emissions gap report, we are looking at a likely temperature range of 2.53 degrees. Which raises the question of what is it that we are adapting to? What this means is that adaptation planning needs to consider the full range of plausible climate scenarios.
"And this has really major implications, particularly for finance, because finance for adaptation is likely to scale considerably based on the needs.
“Which brings me to my second point, which is about means of implementation. And then finally, while much adaptation is indeed local or national, we will need collective action, including global collective action,” he said.
Mr Abolafia-Rosenzweig felt, “In order for the information to be useful for decision making at the local level, there has to be the data and the information products that people can understand, that they can use and they can implement.
“And at the same time, there needs to be information about specific, specific concerns and challenges of the communities facing climate change on the front lines so that scientists can provide that information and appropriate technologies.”
Stressing on the need to connect science with the communities, Ms Laura Schmitt Olabisi, (@Lkshumaine), Professor, Michigan State University said, “In my view, especially working, as I have been in West Africa for the last several years, there are many parts of the world where those connections are just not there for a number of reasons. The capacity is just not there for that communication between science at the national or even the state level and the communities. So that's a real gap and it is often felt in the most vulnerable regions.”
Ms Bhadwal said, “#Adaptation is not necessarily a local issue. Adaptive capacities of countries are also embedded in the global #economicsystems, particularly the financial markets and trade patterns. For the Global Goal on Adaptation to be truly meaningful, in the spirit of the principle of equity and common but differentiated responsibility, it is necessary that the global systems related to finance, trade, IPR, #foodsecurity, #healthsecurity, etc. also become part of the GGA agenda.”
Ms Ilke Geleyn, Programme Manager at G-STIC (@GSTICseries), said, “Breaking down silos between policy makers and scientific community at national and global level is absolutely critical. Equally important is the peer learning among scientists. Multistakeholder engagements are key to developing scientifically robust metrics for adaptation across scales of governance."
Mr Misael Sebastián Gradilla-Hernández, School of Engineering and Sciences of the Tecnológico de Monterrey, Mexico (@UNAM_MX) , emphasized, “Some of the challenges that we really face every day are that scientists are really not leaving the labs and checking what their real needs are. At the same time, communities possess a deep understanding of their local environment."
Ms Poloumi Banerjee, Vice President, IB Group (@ibgroup_india) noted, “For private sector, climate adaptation manifests in two ways. First their own operations, and second their responsibility towards #communities in bringing better adaptation strategies.
“For a profit-oriented organization, resilience and stability of systems is necessary. Private sector is not yet providing resources for adaptation oriented research. There is a huge gap in adaptation finance.”
#TERIatCOP29 #climatechange #reslience #ClimateFinance #COP29Baku
Two data points to ponder:
—New York + Philly both just had the driest month in their 150-year-plus weather histories.
—The U.S. is having its warmest autumn on record by far. The past 2 mos are nearly 1F above any other Sep-Oct on record.
https://t.co/lNsppQbFIj
New Data Assimilation Project Scientist position focusing on atmospheric rivers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego. Check it out here: https://t.co/J1M3JLnA78
1.5-3°C of #GlobalWarming may not sound like a big deal. But for perspective: the difference between recent temperatures & last glacial period (when there were glaciers thousands of feet thick in areas now home to Chicago & New York) is only around ~6°C. [Full link below.]
We find that using an eddy-resolving ocean coupled to a high resolution atmosphere, #atmosphericrivers significantly influence upper ocean processes, and the nature of these #impacts change as the #climate warms.
Interested in #AtmosphericRivers and the upper ocean?
Check out our blog post and research article. Super fun collaborative project thanks Hui Li, Fred Castruccio, Dan Fu, @kylemnardiwx, Xue Liu, @weatherczar
https://t.co/8EasqiH57i
Sad word is spreading from Boulder that the pioneering NCAR climate scientist and Medal of Science laureate Warren Washington has passed from this Earth he studied and cherished with such vigor for so long. More soon but listen to @DrShepherd2013 below for just a little of Dr Washington’s legacy. 1/
Happening Thursday! If you're in #Colorado, come out to the Longmont Museum for an encore presentation of the Explorer Series lecture about atmospheric rivers with Christine Shields. It's sure to make a splash! 💦
Details and registration: https://t.co/MrOY37kdyS
Calling on #sciencepolicy peeps going to #AGU2024... This is a great opportunity to engage with your legislators! @AGUSciPolicy. Sign up by November 8th. https://t.co/DWJkNga64d
Fun evening with @scifri and Jerry Meehl from @NCAR_CGD talking about subseasonal to decadal prediction - show/recording will air on NPR in a couple of weeks
#AGU2024
Share your work with us!
A048 - #AtmosphericRivers: Processes, Impacts, and Uncertainties
Abstract Deadline: 31 July 2024 23:59 EDT/03:59 +1 GMT
Locale: Washington, D.C., December 9-13 or online, 2024
Link: https://t.co/M3N64Y0lVu
#AMS2025
Share your work with us!
#AtmosphericRivers: Processes, Impacts, and Communicating Uncertainty
38th Conference on Climate Variability and Change
Abstracts due 15 August 2024 at 5:00PM ET
Locale: New Orleans, 12–16 January 2025 or online
Link:
https://t.co/iktuqRp1ij