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  • 1. Refsgaard_1-Welcome

    – Print yourselves • Case descriptions and tasks/questions • Lecturers’ presentations – Handouts during the week – Pdfs will be uploaded at website afterwards Practicalities • PC login – Internet access • Printing • Lunch • Coffee – tea • Posters Monday afternoon + refreshments • Dinner Tuesday at 19:00 Students • Brief presentation round – now • 2-minutes presentation of research topics /media/loftslag/Refsgaard_1-Welcome.pdf
  • 2. programme2---PhD-Workshop-preceding-Adaptation-Research-Conference

    During the conference all of you are requested to act as rapporteur in two or three sessions. A preliminary allocation of rapporteur sessions has been made (see below), while accounting for your expertise in certain areas. Participants can suggest changes in the rapporteur session allocation, on the condition a convincing argumentation is provided as well as a confirmed alternative rapporteur /media/loftslag/programme2---PhD-Workshop-preceding-Adaptation-Research-Conference.pdf
  • 3. BIEG_windrose_2005-2014

    Wind rose BIEG 2005 − 2014 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 2010360350340 330 320 310 300 290 280 270 260 250 240 230 220 210 200 190 180 170 160 150 140 130 120 110 100 2 4 6 8 10 Frequency of wind direction (%) Aerodrome Total observations: 87865 Calm: 12% Variable winds: 3.4% Average wind speed for wind direction Wind direction (°) Wind speed (knots ) 0 2 4 6 8 10 0 45 90 135 180 225 270 315 360 N E S W /media/vedur/BIEG_windrose_2005-2014.pdf
  • 4. Publications

    Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) AMAP Report 2004:4. [Extended abstract] Snorrason, Á., & Jónsdóttir, J. F. (2004). Climate, Water and Renewable Energy in the Nordic Countries. Presented at the Joint Assembly, a partnership between CGU, AGU, SEG and EEGS, Montreal, Canada, May 17-21. [Abstract] Snorrason, Á., & Jónsdóttir, J. F. (2004). Impacts of climate change on renewable energy /climatology/research/ce/publications/
  • 5. Adalgeirsdottir-etal-tc-5-961-2011

    Korona et al., 2009) and 2010 (airborne LiDAR in autumn). The Cryosphere, 5, 961975, 2011 www.the-cryosphere.net/5/961/2011/ G. Aðalgeirsdóttir et al.: 20th and 21st century evolution of Hoffellsjökull glacier 963 Fig. 2. (A) Measured bedrock topography of Hoffellsjökull (2001). Blue colours indicate elevation below sea level. (B–E) Surface to- pography at different times, showing retreat /media/ces/Adalgeirsdottir-etal-tc-5-961-2011.pdf
  • 6. Public-Choice-2012---Teyssier---Inequity-and-risk-aversion-in-sequential-public-good-games

    individuals act like homo-œconomicus agents (see for example Andreoni 1988; Berg et al. 1995; Camerer 2003; Forsythe et al. 1994; Isaac et al. 1984). Recent developments in public-choice theory have taken a behavioral approach to broaden the analysis of collective action. The introduction of social preferences, such as altruism, inequity aversion or trust, may mean that optimal collective choices /media/loftslag/Public-Choice-2012---Teyssier---Inequity-and-risk-aversion-in-sequential-public-good-games.pdf
  • 7. Kok_et_al._TFSC_published_2011

    ]. There is ample experience with backcasting, and consequently much has been said about the underlying principles (e.g. [20]), the methodological 838 K. Kok et al. / Technological Forecasting & Social Change 78 (2011) 835851 Author's personal copy framework (e.g. [8,30–32]), and practical applications (e.g. [33–35]). Also the combination between backcasting and other types of scenarios has been /media/loftslag/Kok_et_al._TFSC_published_2011.pdf
  • 8. Lorenzoni_Pidgeon_2006

    for people to conceptualise and to relate to their daily activities, arguably because it cannot be easily translated into the language of popular culture (Ungar, 2000; see also mental models of cli- mate change by Bostrom et al., 1994; Kempton, 1997; discussed later). Secondly, the various datasets available detailing public opinions and attitudes on climate PUBLIC VIEWS ON CLIMATE CHANGE: EUROPEAN /media/loftslag/Lorenzoni_Pidgeon_2006.pdf
  • 9. Journal_of_Hydrology_Veijalainen_etal

    A second, but usually smaller, increase in runoff oc- curs in the autumn. In northern Finland more than 95% of annual maximum floods are caused by spring snowmelt (cf. Fig. 7a). Also the small upstream lakes in the northern part of the lake area and the northernmost of the coastal rivers fall mainly into this cat- egory. In most coastal rivers the major floods can be caused by either snowmelt /media/ces/Journal_of_Hydrology_Veijalainen_etal.pdf
  • 10. Huntjens_etal-2010-Climate-change-adaptation-Reg_Env_Change

    can be found in Huntjens et al. (2007), Chapter 4 of NeWater Deliverable 1.7.9a (http://www.newater.info). Climate change adaptation in European river basins 265 123 interactions, by private and public actors, to achieve adaptation and to enhance the capacity of processes, institutional arrangements and actors to adapt to future environmental changes (Huitema et al. 2009). Adaptive governance /media/loftslag/Huntjens_etal-2010-Climate-change-adaptation-Reg_Env_Change.pdf

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