Consulta de Rewrite
the Future Global Evaluation, Angola Midterm Country Report.
Not exact matches
But the U.K. Met Office (national weather service), the U.S.'s National Center for Atmospheric Research and other partners around the globe aim to change that in the
future by developing regular assessments — much like present
evaluations of
global average temperatures along with building from the U.K. flooding risk modeling efforts — to determine how much a given season's extreme weather could be attributed to human influence.
Summary for Policymakers Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Observations: Atmosphere and Surface Chapter 3: Observations: Ocean Chapter 4: Observations: Cryosphere Chapter 5: Information from Paleoclimate Archives Chapter 6: Carbon and Other Biogeochemical Cycles Chapter 7: Clouds and Aerosols Chapter 8: Anthropogenic and Natural Radiative Forcing Chapter 8 Supplement Chapter 9:
Evaluation of Climate Models Chapter 10: Detection and Attribution of Climate Change: from
Global to Regional Chapter 11: Near - term Climate Change: Projections and Predictability Chapter 12: Long - term Climate Change: Projections, Commitments and Irreversibility Chapter 13: Sea Level Change Chapter 14: Climate Phenomena and their Relevance for
Future Regional Climate Change Chapter 14 Supplement Technical Summary
Evaluation of the terrestrial carbon cycle,
future plant geography and climate - carbon cycle feedbacks using five Dynamic
Global Vegetation Models (DGVMs)
Abstract: An
evaluation of analyses sponsored by the predecessor to the U.K. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) of the
global impacts of climate change under various mitigation scenarios (including CO2 stabilization at 550 and 750 ppm) coupled with an examination of the relative costs associated with different schemes to either mitigate climate change or reduce vulnerability to various climate - sensitive hazards (namely, malaria, hunger, water shortage, coastal flooding, and losses of
global forests and coastal wetlands) indicates that, at least for the next few decades, risks and / or threats associated with these hazards would be lowered much more effectively and economically by reducing current and
future vulnerability to those hazards rather than through stabilization.
Harvey, L.D.D., and Z. Huang,
Evaluation of the potential impact of methane clathrate destabilization on
future global warming, J. Geophysical Res., 100, 2905 - 2926, 1995.
«This study, along with a few others we've published recently, quantifies greenhouse gas emissions from multiple source sectors in a way that will both enable
evaluation of AB32 (the California
Global Warming Solutions Act) and help guide efforts to mitigate emissions in the
future,» Fischer said.
1995 L.D. Danny Harvey and Zhen Huang, «
Evaluation of the Potential Impact of Methane Clathrate Destabilization on
Future Global Warming.»
In
future studies it might therefore be profitable to combine these elements in
global individualised family intervention programmes, although careful economic
evaluation, not undertaken here, will be required.