Category Archives: News

Open call on Climate Research for Development (CR4D) for African Researchers

CR4D will award 1-year research grants to 15 African climate researchers of up to USD 130,000.

The call is open from 18 January to 10 February 2019. The call is accessible here https://aasishango.ccgranttracker.com/Login.aspx?ReturnUrl=/

Information on how to apply is provided in the Guidance Document https://bit.ly/2RTEFLv


Find all relevant information in the press release by the African Academy of Sciences:

15 African researchers to receive £1.5M to conduct research on impacts of climate change in Africa

In October 2018, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) published its Special Report on the Implications of 1.5 degrees warming (SR 1.5), and shortly thereafter UN Environment published its 2018 Emissions Gap Report. The SR 1.5 concludes that the projected impacts of 2 degrees warming are more dangerous than initially thought and brings us closer to several critical tipping points. The report also cautions that we have only 12 years for drastic action if we are to have any chance of achieving the 1.5 degrees’ target. The UN Environment’s Emissions Gap Report establishes that, despite progress made in the global climate governance regime, greenhouse gas emissions are once again on the increase.

More than any other continent, Africa is already bearing the impact of the instability of the climate system as evidenced by increasingly unpredictable patterns of precipitation and high temperatures. These trends have devastating impacts on the continent’s economies, livelihoods and ecosystems. Drastic and urgent climate action is required to ensure that the continent does not experience worsening climate related devastation and retains some capacity to meet its development aspirations.  Drastic climate action will require the engagement of all sectors, interests and stakeholders. A key gap in climate policy and governance in Africa is the weak linkage between science and policy. This gap must be addressed urgently to ensure that development strategies, policies and programmes are climate informed.

The African Academy of Sciences (The AAS), the United Kindgoms’ Department for International Development (DFID) Weather and Climate information SERvices for Africa (WISER) programme and the Africa Climate Policy Centre (ACPC) of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa are today announcing the implementation of a multimillion dollar initiative to support Africa-led climate science research through the Climate Research for Development (CR4D) in Africa initiative. The CR4D initiative was conceptualized at the Africa Climate Conference in 2013 as a mechanism to strengthen links between climate science research and climate information needs to support development planning in Africa. The initiative addresses climate research priority areas that have been identified in Africa by African researchers.

Over the next year, CR4D will support research into identified priority areas for climate change and development linkages. The research will cover foundational climate science, impacts, information and research translation and engagement with policy and decision-making communities. The goal will be to produce research outputs that inform policy in climate sensitive sectors to better prepare Africa to deal with the impacts of climate change.

Dr James Murombedzi of the ACPC noted that “While Africa is responsible for only 4% of global greenhouse-gas emissions, 65% of the African population is directly impacted by climate change. It is therefore imperative that climate action must be stepped up to deliver high impact outcomes for African populations, and to ensure the resilience of economies, ecosystems and infrastructure on the continent. The framework for scaling up climate action was put in place in the 2015 Paris Agreement. The realization of the ideals of this agreement will be determined by the national frameworks, strategies and policies that are put in place to implement national and sub-national climate actions. The CR4D initiative will enhance support for improved climate information and services to contribute to climate sensitive planning. This, in turn, will contribute towards ensuring human and environmental security, improved investment policies, as well as institutional developments to manage potential threats from climate change.”

The Executive Director of The AAS, Prof. Nelson Torto says, “With smallholder farms, most being rainfed, forming about 80% of farmed land in sub-Saharan Africa and given that most of sub-Saharan Africa’s population draws its livelihood from smallholder farming,[1] the CR4D initiative will be a huge addition to Africa’s quest to transform itself through science. Tackling climate change in Africa requires that African researchers are supported to ensure they have the best understanding of the problems to be better prepared to provide and amplify solutions. The AAS is particularly proud to be part of this noble initiative and we look forward to celebrating its impact in all climate sensitive sectors including agriculture, health, water resources, tourism and other areas of socio-economic development.”

CR4D will award 1-year research grants to 15 African climate researchers of up to USD 130,000. Through The AAS Rising Research Leaders programme, grantees will be supported to develop as independent research leaders through training, mentoring, and networking opportunities that will enable international collaborations. CR4D candidates must be hosted by or affiliated with a university, research institute or other eligible institution of higher education in Africa. They must hold a PhD in climate or related sciences and/or have a proven track record of high-quality, impactful research in a relevant field. Applicants must have a clearly defined scientific research proposal and all African nationals are eligible to apply.

A call for proposals for CR4D has been issued and is open from 18 January to 10 February 2019. The call is accessible here https://aasishango.ccgranttracker.com/Login.aspx?ReturnUrl=/

Information on how to apply is provided in the Guidance Document https://bit.ly/2RTEFLv

Environment and climate change are strategic focus areas of The Academy’s five-year strategic plan, 2018 to 2022 that includes health and wellbeing; social sciences and humanities; natural sciences; and policy and governance.

 

[1] http://www.fao.org/3/a-BO092E.pdf


 

The African Academy of Sciences The AAS is a Pan-African organisation with headquarters in Kenya. The Academy has a tripartite mandate of pursuing excellence by recognising scholars and achievers; providing advisory and think-tank functions for shaping the continent’s strategies and policies; and implementing key science, technology and innovation programmes that impact on developmental challenges through the agenda setting and funding platform – the Alliance for Accelerating Excellence in Science in Africa (AESA).

Find webpage

For any queries regarding eligibility for this scheme, please contact The AAS office at 

For further information on the involved institutions and agencies, please contact the SPARC office.

Registration open: ACAM: Atmospheric Composition and Asian Monsoon Workshop & Training school June 2019

Registration is now open for the 4th Workshop – 26-28 June 2019 / 3rd Training School – 24-25 June 2019 of the Atmospheric Composition and Asian Monsoon (ACAM) activity.

the workshop and training school will be held at the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), Bangi, Malaysia

Deadline for Abstract Submission: 15 March 2019

Find meeting webpage

Scientific topics will include:
  • Emissions and air quality in the Asian monsoon region
  • Aerosols, clouds, and their interactions with the Asian monsoon
  • Impact of monsoon convection on chemistry
  • UTLS Response to the Asian Monsoon
Scientific Organizing Committee Co-Chairs

Hans Schlager
Mian Chin

Local Organizing Committee Co-Chairs

Mohd Talib Latif 
Fatimah Ahamad

SPARC Science update: 08 January – 14 January

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

Highlight article (office choice):
Taking climate model evaluation to the next level. By V. Eyring et al. in Nature: Climate Change.


Connections between the Madden–Julian Oscillation and surface temperatures in winter 2018 over eastern North America. By B.S. Barrett in the Atmospheric Science Letters.

Structural changes in the shallow and transition branch of the Brewer–Dobson circulation induced by El Niño. By M. Diallo et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Factors Influencing the Seasonal Predictability of Northern Hemisphere Severe Winter Storms. By F. Hansen, et al. in the Geophysical Research Letters.

Weak stratospheric polar vortex events modulated by the Arctic sea ice loss. By K. Hoshi et al. in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

Quantifying uncertainties due to chemistry modeling – evaluation of tropospheric composition simulations in the CAMS model. By V. Huijnen et al. in Geoscientific Model Development.

The Efficiency of Data Assimilation. By G. Nearing et al. in Water Resources Research.

Representation of synoptic‐scale Rossby Wave Packets and Blocking in the S2S Prediction Project Database. By J.F. Quinting and F. Vitart in the Geophysical Research Letters.

Discussion papers – open for comment:

Extratropical Age of Air trends and causative factors in climate projection simulations. By P. Šácha et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

SPARC Science update: 01 January – 07 January

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

Simulating the Antarctic stratospheric vortex transport barrier: comparing the Unified Model to reanalysis. By C. Cameron et al. in Climate Dynamics.

The South American Low‐Level Jet: a New Climatology, Variability, and Changes. By T.L. Montini, C. Jones, and L.M.V. Carvalho in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

Initialization and ensemble generation for decadal climate predictions: A comparison of different methods. By I. Polkova et al. in the Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems.

A Dynamical Perspective on Atmospheric Temperature Variability and its Response to Climate Change. By T. Tamarin-Brodsky et al. in the Journal of the Climate.

The Development of the North Pacific Jet Phase Diagram as an Objective Tool to Monitor the State and Forecast Skill of the Upper-Tropospheric Flow Pattern. By A.C. Winters, D. Keyser, and L.F. Bosart in Weather and Forecasting.

SPARC Science update: 25 December – 31 December

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

Atmospheric Motion Vectors Derived from an Infrared Window Channel of a Geostationary Satellite Using Particle Image Velocimetry. By W.-L. Chuang et al. in the Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology.

Analysis of Climate Trends and Leading Modes of Climate Variability for MENA Region. By M.M. Dogar and T. Sato in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

Adapting attribution science to the climate extremes of tomorrow. By L.J. Harrington and F.E.L. Otto in the Environmental Research Letters.

The Role of Internal Variability in Twenty‐First‐Century Projections of the Seasonal Cycle of Northern Hemisphere Surface Temperature. By V. Yettella and M.R. England in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

Causes of East Asian Temperature Multidecadal Variability Since 850 CE. By J. Wang et al. in the Geophysical Research Letters.

SPARC Science update: 18 December – 24 December

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

S2S reboot: An argument for greater inclusion of machine learning in subseasonal to seasonal forecasts. By J. Cohen et al. in WIREs Climate Change.

On the Momentum Budget of the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation in the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model. By R.R. Garcia and J.H. Richter in the Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences.

Predicting Sudden Stratospheric Warming 2018 and its Climate Impacts with a Multi‐Model Ensemble. By A. Karpechko et al. in the Geophysical Research Letters.

The three atmospheric circulations over the Indian Ocean and the Maritime Continent and their modulation by the passage of the MJO. By D. Kuznetsova, T. Dauhut, and J.-P. Chaboureau in the Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences.

11 years of Rayleigh Lidar Observations of Gravity Wave Activity above the Southern Tip of South America. By P. Llamedo et al. in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

High tropospheric ozone in Lhasa within the Asian summer monsoon anticyclone in 2013: influence of convective transport and stratospheric intrusions. By D. Li et al. in Atmocpheric Chemistry and Physics.

Verification of an Approximate Thermodynamic Equation with Application to Study on Arctic Stratospheric Temperature Changes. By R. Liu and Y. Fu in the Journal of the Atmoshperic Sciences.

Extreme cold wave over East Asia in January 2016: A possible response to the larger internal atmospheric variability induced by Arctic warming. By S. Ma and C. Zhu in the Journal of the Climate.

Madden–Julian oscillation changes under anthropogenic warming. By E.D. Maloney, Á.F. Adames, and H.X. Bui in Nature: Climate Change.

 

Discussion papers – open for comment:

The upper-atmosphere extension of the ICON general circulation model. By S. Borchert et al. in Geoscientific Model Development.

Characteristics of the tropical tropopause inversion layer using high-resolution temperature profiles retrieved from COSMIC GNSS Radio Occultation. By N. Noersomadi, T. Tsuda, and M. Fujiwara in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Variability of temperature and ozone in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere from multi-satellite observations and reanalysis data. By M. Shangguan, W. Wang, and S. Jin in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

SPARC Science update: 11 December – 17 December

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

A 17 year climatology of the macrophysical properties of convection in Darwin. By R.C. Jackson et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

A Multivariate Probabilistic Framework for Tracking the Intertropical Convergence Zone: Analysis of Recent Climatology and Past Trends. By A. Mamalakis and E. Foufoula‐Georgiou in the Geophysical Research Letters.

Quantifying the irreducible uncertainty in near‐term climate projections. By J. Marotzke in WIREs Climate Change.

Estimating daily climatological normals in a changing climate. By A. Rigal, J.-M. Azaïs, and A. Ribes in Climate Dynamics.

Estimation of the variability of mesoscale energy spectra with three years of COSMO-DE analyses. By T. Selz, L. Bierdel, and G.C. Craig in the Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences.

ITCZ width controls on Hadley cell extent and eddy-driven jet position, and their response to warming. By O. Watt-Meyer and D.M.W. Frierson in the Journal of the Climate.

 

Discussion papers – open for comment:

Mechanism of ozone loss under enhanced water vapour conditions in the mid-latitude lower stratosphere in summer. By S. Robrecht et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

A numerical process study on the rapid transport of stratospheric air down to the surface over western North America and the Tibetan Plateau. By B. Škerlak et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Deadline approaching: CMIP6 Model Analysis Workshop – submit your abstract until 15 December

Abstract submission is now open for the

“CMIP6 Model Analysis Workshop”

25-28 March 2019,  Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), Barcelona (Spain) 

Please go to  https://cmip6workshop19.sciencesconf.org/

The workshop is jointly organized by the WCRP Working Group on Coupled Modelling (WGCM) CMIP Panel and the European Commission Horizon 2020 projects PRIMAVERA (PRocess-based climate sIMulation: AdVances in high-resolution modelling and European climate Risk Assessment) and EUCP (EUropean Climate Prediction system).

Following the format of the WCRP CMIP5 model analysis workshop held in 2012, the workshop focus will be on:

  • Single and multi-model CMIP6 analyses and evaluation that takes advantage of the large suite of CMIP6 experiments
  • Efforts to connect model development and analysis to identify Earth system model improvements that help reduce systematic biases and/or increase the realism of models
  • Methods for multi-model analysis
  • Climate change impacts

The workshop will be structured around the three scientific questions:

  1. How does the Earth system respond to forcing?
  2. What are the origins and consequences of systematic model biases?
  3. How can we assess future climate change given climate variability, predictability and uncertainty in scenarios.

Workshop approach

 Short-presentation/poster format

The workshop will consist of a series of seven half-day sessions of three hours each. Each session will begin with 20-25 presenters given a 3 minute time slot to show no more than one slide summarizing the main conclusions of their poster. The rest of the half-day session will consist of viewing posters of that session. In addition, there will be an invited plenary talk each day.

Participation is limited by the size of the venue (~200 people) and format of the workshop.  Abstracts will be accepted based on relevance to the workshop focus.

 Timeline

  • Abstract submission opens:                              15 October 2018
  • Abstract submission deadline:                          15 December 2018
  • Abstract / Participation acceptance:                  15 January 2019

Hope to see you in Barcelona next year!

Best wishes,

Scientific Organizing Committee of the Workshop

Veronika Eyring, Greg Flato, Jean-Francois Lamarque, Jerry Meehl, Cath Senior, Ron Stouffer, and Karl Taylor (CMIP Panel)

Francisco J. Doblas-Reyes (EUCP)

Malcolm Roberts (PRIMAVERA)