-
grated water management: agency, awareness raising and
education, type of governance and cooperation structures,
information management and—exchange, policy develop-
ment and—implementation, risk management, and finances
and cost recovery. This comparative analysis has an
explorative character intended to identify general patterns
in adaptive and integrated water management and to
determine its
/media/loftslag/Huntjens_etal-2010-Climate-change-adaptation-Reg_Env_Change.pdf
• Methodology
• Key findings
• Conclusions
2
Forestry in Finland
1. Land area distribution 2. Species distribution
Total Forestry land 26.3 mill. ha
3. Growing stocks, increment and drain 4. Site type distribution
Source: Finnish Forest Research Institute, 2008
3
Forest management
Final felling
Timber
Energy biomass
Thinning
Timber
Pre-commercial or
energy biomass thinning
Regeneration Regeneration
4
/media/ces/Alam_Ashraful_CES_2010.pdf
and the groundwater module. The coupling
between both modules was done by a net boundary flux between the unsaturated zone and
the groundwater (Schulla & Jasper, 2007).
Information on land use, soil type, elevation and other general properties of the watershed
are given in static distributed grids while a number of parameters describing specific
processes are adjusted to the properties of each
/media/ces/2010_016.pdf
Steinunn S. Jakobsdóttir & others - Opening address
08:55 Ragnar Stefánsson - From earthquake prediction research to useful warnings ahead of earthquakes
09:20 Ragnar Slunga - Microearthquakes, stresses, crustal stability, and earthquake warnings
09:45 Reynir Bödvarsson - Development history and future potential of the SIL system
10:10 Coffee and posters
10:50 Halldór Geirsson & others
/earthquakes-and-volcanism/conferences/jsr-2009/schedule/
acceptance, we
request a copy of the final manuscript, and as
many figures as possible, on a computer
diskette. It is essential that the name and
version of the word processing program and
computer type, is included on the diskette.
Preferred software formats are LaTex or MS
Word. The editors also welcome an ascii-text
version of the final manuscript in electronic
mail. Short to moderate
/media/jar/Jokull-guidlines.pdf
{WGIII
3.2, TS.3, SPM}
45
Topic 3 Climate change and its impacts in the near and long term under different scenarios
3.2 Projections of future changes in climate
For the next two decades a warming of about 0.2°C per de-
cade is projected for a range of SRES emissions scenarios.
Even if the concentrations of all GHGs and aerosols had
been kept constant at year 2000 levels, a further warming of
about 0.1
/media/loftslag/IPPC-2007-ar4_syr.pdf
station Region type Catchment area,
Q station (km2)
Lake percentage
(%)
Settlement for
inundation analysis
Boundary conditions
of the 2D model
a Köngäs Ounasjoki Small/medium,
northern river
4488 4.2 Kittilä Upstream : Q; Downstream : river WSE
b Sonkajärvi Small, lake 946 4.4 – –
c Keppo Lapuanjoki Small/medium,
coastal river
3949 3.0 Lapua Upstream : Q; Downstream river WSE
d Harjavalta
/media/ces/Journal_of_Hydrology_Veijalainen_etal.pdf
by 25 % in the interior of Ice-
land, where the large ice caps are located (Nawri and Björns-
son, 2010).
Before year 2010, the glacier model is forced with daily
mean records constructed from the monthly mean observed
temperature and precipitation as previously explained. Pos-
sible natural variations in the climate are important for near-
future projections as the magnitude of the expected
/media/ces/Adalgeirsdottir-etal-tc-5-961-2011.pdf
.............................................................................................. 45
5.3 Present weather ..................................................................................... 45
Appendix ......................................................................................................... 47
5
List of Figures
1 How PWD22 determines the type of precipitation. ........................................ 11
2 Number of records as a function of the height
/media/vedurstofan-utgafa-2019/VI_2019_009.pdf
“Regional hydrological droughts and weather types in north-western Europe “
University of Oslo Droughts WTs SummaryRelationsIntroduction Outlook
Weather types (WTs)
• simple, discrete characterization of the current atmospheric
conditions over a region on the nominal scale;
• may be based on one or several meteorological variables.
• Weather type classification (WTC): the set of WTs describing
/media/ces/AnneFleig_May2010_CES.pdf