Sentences with phrase «multiple climate scenarios»

For any consideration of climate resilience, plans need to be robust against multiple climate scenarios in the medium to long term.
Multiple climate scenarios that address at least one, or preferably several sources of uncertainty allow these uncertainties to be quantified and explicitly accounted for in impact assessments.

Not exact matches

To read about how we intend to manage our environmental water holdings this year, including multiple scenarios based on different climate conditions, please see the Portfolio Management Plans.
Finally, it's necessary to plan for multiple future climate scenarios by coordinating engineers, economists and conservationists.
IIASA researchers have been involved in greenhouse gas emission projections since the beginning of climate change research in the 1970s, including research on both historical emissions as well as projections for future emissions based on multiple scenarios of economic and population growth and technological change.
The Climate Impact Lab's sea - level rise projections use a framework that ties together multiple threads of information to assess the probability of local sea - level changes around the world, under different future emissions scenarios.
Septic Matthew, independent of scenarios A, B and C, the current climate state favors 3 K / doubling based on multiple studies.
243, Ray Ladbury: Septic Matthew, independent of scenarios A, B and C, the current climate state favors 3 K / doubling based on multiple studies.
Last year, with the IEA World Energy Outlook 2010 we were happily surprised to see that the IEA still takes the 450 ppm CO2 stabilisation scenario seriously — indeed corresponding with the 2 degrees climate target that world leaders have agreed on multiple times.
Why not construct some emissions scenarios that cover what you think might happen over the next 50 (or 100) years, and then run those scenarios through a range of leading climate models, performing multiple runs for each model to capture both the uncertainty in the model physics and internal variability.
It suggests three major changes: 1) project and policy preparation need to reflect higher risks, where vulnerability assessments and greater use of climate scenario modelling are combined with a better understanding of interconnections between smallholder farming and wider landscapes; 2) this deeper appreciation of interconnected risks should drive a major scaling up of successful «multiple - benefit» approaches to sustainable agricultural intensification by smallholder farmers; 3) climate change and fiscal austerity are reshaping the architecture of public international development finance.
Indeed by producing large ensembles, for multiple different emission scenarios, we do present the climate projections as a set of possible future climate risks, with associated uncertainty.
Climate Interactive, on the other hand, assesses multiple scenarios, one in which there is no post-2030 action and several in which there is continued emissions reductions in certain countries to varying extents.
However, the honest broker role is only possible if WGIII explores multiple scenarios for managing the climate problem.
To this end, a number of SRM governance proposals will be tested against a range of «Climate Response in 2030» scenarios constructed by a multi-disciplinary group of participants consisting of a core group of 10 - 12 researchers from multiple disciplines, practitioners from policy and NGO backgrounds, and a revolving set of figures external to the SRM research community.
Sugiyama, T. and J. Sinton, 2005: Orchestra of treaties: A future climate regime scenario with multiple treaties among like - minded countries.
Compared to scenarios addressing only the climate mitigation objective, the SDS places a stronger emphasis on decentralised, modular low - carbon technologies (such as solar PV and wind) as a means to achieving multiple objectives.
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