in Finland
Noora Veijalainen a,*, Eliisa Lotsari b, Petteri Alho b, Bertel Vehviläinen a, Jukka Käyhkö b
a Freshwater Centre, Finnish Environment Institute, Mechelininkatu 34a, P.O. Box 140, FI-00251, Helsinki, Finland
b Department of Geography, FI-20014 University of Turku, Turku, Finland
a r t i c l e i n f o
Article history:
Received 7 January 2010
Received in revised form 13 June 2010
Accepted
/media/ces/Journal_of_Hydrology_Veijalainen_etal.pdf
)
Faculty of Forest Sciences
University of Joensuu
P.O. Box 111, FI-80101
Joensuu, Finland.
Email: mailto:seppo.kellomaki@joensuu.fi
Here is a full PDF version of the Bio Energy flyer
Partners
CICERO, Center for Klimaforskning, Norway
Denmark
/ces/project/bio_energy/
Probabilistic forecasts of temperature
and precipitation change based on
global climate model simulations
(CES deliverable 2.2)
Jouni Räisänen
Department of Physics, P.O. Box 64, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
Email: jouni.raisanen@helsinki.fi
Kimmo Ruosteenoja
Finnish Meteorological Institute, P.O. Box 503, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland
Email: kimmo.ruosteenoja
/media/ces/CES_D2_2_poster_3x3.pdf
in
the atmosphere
Changes in statistical
distributions including
precipitation extremes
Bengtsson Environ. Res. Lett. 2010, 5, 025002, Fig. 1
Global land precipitation since 1900
– strong regional differences, insignificant global trend
IPCC 2007, Fig. 3.12-3.13
Drought Severity Index since 1900
– dry areas drier, wet areas wetter
IPCC 2007, FAQ 3.1, Fig. 1
IPCC 2007, Box TS.2, Fig. 1
Dynamic circulation
/media/ces/Moberg_Anders_CES_2010.pdf
1
Probabilistic forecasts of temperature and precipitation change by
combining results from global and regional climate models (CES Climate
Modelling and Scenarios Deliverable D2.3)
Jouni Räisänen* and Leena Ruokolainen
Department of Physics, P.O. Box 48, FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
18 August 2009
*Corresponding author
Email: jouni.raisanen@helsinki.fi
/media/ces/D2.3_CES_Prob_fcsts_GCMs_and_RCMs.pdf
6University of Washington,
Seattle, WA 98195, USA. 7NOAA Geophysical Fluid
Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA.
*Author for correspondence. E-mail: cmilly@usgs.gov.
An uncertain future challenges water planners.
Published by AAAS
on July 12, 201
1
www.sciencemag.or
g
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1 FEBRUARY 2008 VOL 319 SCIENCE www.sciencemag.org574
POLICYFORUM
combined with opera-
tions
/media/loftslag/Milly_etal-2008-Stationarity-dead-Science.pdf
)
is shown. At the margin the grid boxes of the RCAO RCM are
visible. The area between Illulisat and Swiss camp is commonly
called Paakitsôq.
respectively. The Automatic Weather Stations (AWS) Swiss Camp and Crawford are located
on the ice sheet and are operated by the Greenland Climate Network (GC-net) (Steffen and
Box, 2001). The locations of the stations are indicated in Fig. 1, further details
/media/ces/ces_geus_paakitsoq_full_report.pdf
the period 1971-2000 to 2020-2049 under the A1B greenhouse gas scenario, derived from simulations
performed with 18 global models. The yellow box covers the interval between the 25th and 75th
percentage points, with the median (50th point) shown by a black line. Whiskers represent the in-
terval from the 5th to the 95th percentage point. Top-left: south-western Greenland (65◦N, 50◦W);
top-right
/media/ces/CES_D2.4_solar_CMIP3.pdf
Participants and organization of project
For queries, please contact to:
Prof. Seppo Kellomäki (Co-ordinator)
Ashraful Alam (Researcher)
Faculty of Forest Sciences
University of Joensuu
P.O. Box 111, FI-80101
Joensuu, Finland.
Email: firstname.lastname@joensuu.fi
Bioenergy production potential increased due to the
climate change both in energy wood thinnings and in
final fellings (FF). In addition
/media/ces/CES_BioFuels_Flyer_new.pdf