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NOTE These slides were prepared by the Directors of the IPOs funded by UK’s Natural Environmental Research Council and presented on 8 October 2007 to NERC (and other UK Research Council) staff based in Swindon Office. The seminar aimed to explain what the international GEC Programmes and Projects do, and the role the IPOs play. While it was obviously aimed at NERC and UK interests, and the examples of the sorts of science the Projects deliver were drawn from those Projects for which NERC supports the relevant IPO, many of the points about what IPOs do are generic and may be of help to other IPOs. Please contact John Ingram, GECAFS Executive Officer ([email protected]) for further information. International Research on Global Environmental Change The role of the International Project Offices (IPOs) in delivering the Global Environmental Change Programmes A briefing to Swindon Office Staff Manuel Barange, David Carlson, Howard Cattle, Jeff Hare, John Ingram & Dave Raffaelli (Directors of NERC-funded IPOs) What are the major environmental challenges? 1. Climate change 2. Loss of biodiversity 3. Over-exploitation of the natural resource base 4. Disruption to biogeochemical cycles and other aspects of Earth system functioning 5. Potential increase in hydro-meteorological extreme events 6. Air, water and soil pollution, and effects on human health All world-wide phenomena => Complex and varied international GEC science agenda International GEC science is structured to address these global challenges: 3 Core Projects Joint Projects: • Carbon 9 Core Projects • Food • Health 6 Core Projects 5 Core Projects • Water + OSCs, IRSs, START NERC’s Science Themes 1. Climate system 2. Biodiversity 3. Sustainable use of natural resources 4. Earth system science 5. Natural hazards 6. Environment, pollution and human health 7. Technologies Address major global environmental issues Offer opportunities to provide UK leadership in GEC research Map well to international Core/Joint Projects and agendas CLIVAR Climate Variability and Predictability 1993-2013 NERC Themes 1&4 To observe, simulate and predict Earth’s climate system, with focus on ocean-atmosphere interactions, enabling better understanding of climate variability, predictability and change, to the benefit of society and the environment in which we live. • Role of the oceans in climate • Anthropogenic climate change • Decadal variability • Monsoons • ENSO and other modes of tropical variability • Global modelling and data synthesis Coordination of model runs and archive for IPCC AR4 bioSUSTAINABILITY 2003-2013 NERC Themes 2&3 To guide policy and decision making that supports the conservation and sustainable use of global biodiversity for human well-being. • Effectiveness of current measures for conservation and use of biodiversity. • Social, political and economic drivers of biodiversity loss. • Social choice and decision making about conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity. bioSUSTAINABILITY Measures of the different expressions of biodiversity may not necessarily track each other over time when policy changes. Sandwich terns (Sterna sandvicensis) migrate to Europe in southerly and easterly directions from breeding areas in the UK and are, thus, vulnerable to policies across multiple nation states. GLOBEC Global Ocean Ecosystem Dynamics 1999-2010 NERC Themes 1, 2, 3 & 4 To understand the structure and functioning of the global ocean, and its response to physical forcing, to forecast the responses of the marine ecosystem to global change. • Multiscale physical environmental processes and large-scale changes in marine ecosystems. • Relationships between structure and dynamics with emphasis on trophodynamic pathways, their variability and the role of nutrition quality in the food web. • Impacts of global change on stock dynamics using models and observation systems to develop the capability to predict future impacts. • Consequences of changing marine ecosystems on the Earth system. The highs and lows of Atlantic cod stocks responses to ocean warming 2°C above current levels 4°C above current levels Expected changes in the abundance of the cod stocks with temperature increase Green = Increase Yellow = No change Red = Decrease Black =Collapse Grey = Uncertain Drinkwater, K.F. 2005. The response of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) to future climate change. ICES Journal of Marine Science 62: 1327-1337. GECAFS Global Environmental Change NERC Themes and Food Systems 3, 4 & 5 2001-2011 To determine strategies to cope with the impacts of GEC on food systems and to assess the environmental and socioeconomic consequences of adaptive responses aimed at improving food security. • GEC impacts on food security in different regions and among different socioeconomic groups. • Adapting food systems to cope with both GEC and changing demands for food. • Feedbacks of different adaptation strategies on environment and food security. • Improved policy-making for food systems in the context of GEC. Scenario-based assessments of food security outcomes Global Caribbean _ Social Value __ + 0 Decrease Food Safety Increase Production ++ Distribution Caribbean Order From Strength Inter-Regional Exchange Intra-Caribbean Exchange Nutritional Value Preference Affordability Caribbean TechnoGarden Caribbean Adapting Mosaic Allocation GECAFS. 2006. Prototype Scenarios for the Caribbean. GECAFS Rpt 2. SOLAS Surface Ocean – Lower Atmosphere Study 2002-2012 NERC Themes 1, 2, 4, 6 & 7 To achieve quantitative understanding of the key biogeochemical-physical interactions and feedbacks between the ocean and atmosphere, and of how this coupled system affects and is affected by climate and environmental change. • Biogeochemical interactions and air-sea feedbacks. • Exchange processes at the air-sea interface and in the boundary layers. • Air-sea flux of CO2 and other radiatively-active gases. Iron addition to the ocean A SOLAS-sponsored synthesis of results from 12 purposeful open ocean iron addition experiments concludes that there are many critical issues surrounding the proposed practice, including the uncertainty as to the effective carbon uptake, impacts to ocean chemistry, impacts to ecosystems, uncertainties to verification, etc. Jickells et al, 2005: “Global iron connections between desert dust, ocean biogeochemistry, and climate, Science, 308, pp 67-71. Boyd et al, 2007: “Mesoscale iron enrichment experiments 1993-2005: Synthesis and future directions, Science, 315, pp 612-617. IPY International Polar Year Mch 2007- Mch 2009 • Large scientific programme focused on the Arctic and the Antarctic. • Two full annual cycles. • Wide range of physical, biological and social research topics. • Unprecedented opportunity to demonstrate, follow, and get involved with, cutting edge science in realtime. Synergies between Core/Joint Projects adds further value • GLOBEC & CLIVAR: joint workshop on Climate driving of ecosystems • GECAFS & SOLAS: joint workshop on Eastern Pacific fisheries • CLIVAR & SOLAS: joint experimental programme on VAMOS OceanCloud-Atmosphere-Land Study • SOLAS & GLOBEC: joint symposium on upwelling systems • CLIVAR leading the IPY’s “Climate of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean” • GLOBEC regional projects are “cluster coordinators” for IPY Coordinating Core/Joint Project research worldwide is a major undertaking provided by “International Project Offices” (IPOs) NERC invests in 6 IPOs in UK Environment Department University of York Environmental Change Institute University of Oxford Plymouth Marine Laboratory Plymouth School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia NERC/BAS Cambridge National Oceanography Centre, Southampton NERC/University of Southampton IPOs fulfil many functions to help advance international science and provide UK leadership 1. IPOs lead development of internationally-endorsed Science Plans • Consensus • Strategy • Implementation 2. IPOs organise, raise funding for, and lead international workshops (2006-07) BioSUSTAINABILITY CLIVAR GECAFS GLOBEC IPY SOLAS 3. IPOs organise major collaborative exercises and help distribute results CLIVAR IPCC Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Archive Activity coordinated through the CLIVAR Working Group on Coupled Modeling IPCC climate projections are now widely available: > 1000 users > 550 diagnostic subprojects > 260 new publications (as of June 2007) > 33 terabytes of data ready for download > 200 terabytes downloaded Archive available for regional projections in Europe 4. IPOs prepare and distribute science and policy-related products 5. IPOs organise communications and outreach to the research community interactive websites & web-based fora newsletters & brochures 6. IPOs help deliver objective scientific evidence in readily usable form to help policy-makers and society at large understand and respond to GEC Global Caribbean Caribbean Order From Strength Caribbean TechnoGarden Caribbean Adapting Mosaic 7. IPOs engage with key stakeholders and create strategic partnerships internationally, re: Conventions Co-sponsored by: • 4 fisheries Commissions • 2 international science organisations (ICES, PICES) • 2 Intergovernmental bodies (IOC, FAO) regionally, re: development (cf. ESPA) 8. IPOs organise and help deliver educational outreach 9. IPOs help create and support vibrant, integrated research communities • Enthusiastic participation by more than 60 countries • Very broad array of science • £600M research funding (2 years) • 50,000 participants • New polar infrastructure 10. IPOs organise and administer international Scientific Steering Committees and their activities, and help maintain high UK profile Chair or Co-Chair Members (including Focus Group Leaders) David Raffaelli Tim Palmer Diana Liverman Peter Liss University of York ECMWF University of Oxford University of East Anglia Franco Molteni Kate Brown Roger Harris Chris Rapley Tim Jickells ECMWF University of East Anglia Plymouth Marine Laboratory ex BAS University of East Anglia UK scientists are also prominent in Panels & Working Groups e.g. 23 UK scientists across CLIVAR’s 14 Panels Conclusion IPOs help international science by: leading development of, and promoting, internationallyagreed agendas coordinating, and synthesising results from international research teams publishing and disseminating results and linking stakeholders providing and coordinating capacity building IPOs help NERC by: contributing to delivery of NERC’s strategic goal coordinating contributions to NERC Science Themes providing international leadership, promotion and branding