1 / 12

Climate and Global Change Working Group Report NOAA Climate Review September 15-17, 2003

Climate and Global Change Working Group Report NOAA Climate Review September 15-17, 2003. NOAA Science Advisory Board Nov 3, 2003. General Comments. Follow-up to April Meeting Joint meeting with the Climate Monitoring Working Group for half day

kiara
Download Presentation

Climate and Global Change Working Group Report NOAA Climate Review September 15-17, 2003

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Climate and Global Change Working Group ReportNOAA Climate ReviewSeptember 15-17, 2003 NOAA Science Advisory Board Nov 3, 2003

  2. General Comments • Follow-up to April Meeting • Joint meeting with the Climate Monitoring Working Group for half day • Focus was NOAA Climate Program, response to WG advice from April meeting • Chicago venue for the joint meeting

  3. Agenda - CGCWG • CCSP Update • NOAA Climate Program Structure • CCSP Deliverables • April Climate Program Review Followup • Intraseasonal to Interannual Prediction Program • National Strategy for Climate Model Improvement and Product Generation • Carbon Cycle Observing System • Clouds and Aerosols • Budget Update & Strategy

  4. Agenda - Joint Session with CMWG • NPOESS and Climate Data Records • Data Stewardship and CLASS (Comprehensive Large-Array Stewardship System) • NOAA Baseline Assessment for Climate Observations and Analysis • Adaptation of Model Data for Use in Assessments

  5. General Comments • NOAA must integrate corporate plan with the national plan (CCSP) • Budgetary constraints lead to tensions between ongoing and new activities, e.g. monitoring/ observing vice new networks/technology, new thrusts (ecological dimensions) • NOAA’s role in ecosystem observations vis a vis other thrusts is yet to be articulated • Decision support currently is ill-defined/immature • Priority setting for the program is/will be paramount

  6. CCSP Update • Annual Guidance memo to be reviewed by C&GC and CMWG • NRC Climate Data Records study • Workshop held on “Analysis of the Climate System” • Intra-Seasonal-Interannual Program Planning • Request for input on program priorities and strategies, e.g. Ecosystem activities, continuity in climate monitoring, NOAA role in the broad, national program, dealing with fiscal constraints, etc. • “…base program is a higher priority than the initiatives…”

  7. Intra-Seasonal/Interannual Prediction Program • Integrated, requirement based, product driven R&D program • Need a paradigm for ISIP forecasts and services • Matrix/Program management challenges • Challenged by April Review advice • Performance measures goal: “…a realistic skill score” • Computing infrastructure needs enhancement for success • Climate Model Diagnostics Consortium - addressing the role of the tropics in drought and climate variability • Regional applications - need the “pull” from stakeholders • Where is the stakeholders’ input in the program plan? • Should it be/is it connected to the “attribution” dimension of the program?

  8. Strategy for Climate Model Improvement • Target is the IPCC runs - IPCC is a/the major customer • Applaud emerging collaborations with other groups • Commited to Env. Systems Modeling Framework • NCEP interactions with GFDL and academia have been slow to develop than hoped • Concern about the priority/plan for ocean data assimilation • Concern about regional climate modeling and/or downscaling activities • Must take care to have the earth system modeling activities be a true community effort and not simply a a more local GFDL collaboration

  9. Carbon Cycle Observing System • North American Array design • Tall towers, intensive sites, surface sites, aircraft tradeoffs • Time/space scales (1000 km/variable in time) • 30 sites in 2007 • A conundrum: east coast/west coast CO2 levels • 2007 Goal: reduce N.Am. Carbon sink uncertainty by 50% • Global ocean carbon survey plan/implementation • Must improve Carbon inverse models for source-sink determinations • Must/should explore partnering opportunities with academia for observing, analysis and model interpretation

  10. Clouds and Aerosols • Identified as a high priority program need • Need a global aerosol observing system • Satellite (NPOESS/APS) is a necessary component • Integration with in situ observations? • Integration with process understanding? • Translation of observations to climate forcing is largely overlooked in the plan and design of the observing system • NOAA should focus on a select/important aspect of the problem, e.g., clouds maybe an appropriate target • The current plan seems to lack a way to integrate/assimilate local-scale process type efforts into the observing system prior to full-up deployment

  11. Budget Update & Strategy • Must push planning out beyond FY06 (challenge) • Proposed program structure (WG asked to react to this) • Climate Observations and Analysis • Climate Forcing • Climate Predictions and Projections • Climate and Ecosystems • Climate Information for Decisions • GAP analysis (probably accurate) • Budgetary support (real or imagined?) • Transitions from research to operations • Regional stakeholder input and usage

  12. Final Thoughts • Climate Information System thrusts need investment - there are major gaps in the current activities • Setting priorities in a Climate Information System is an ongoing challenge • NOAA must establish a clear and open process whereby the stakeholders in the set of core products will have input into their specifications and can comment on their utility • No clearly articulated role for private enterprise in the information system

More Related