(-33%) during 1970 to 2004 has been smaller than the com-
bined effect of global income growth (77%) and global population
growth (69%); both drivers of increasing energy-related CO2 emis-
sions. The long-term trend of declining CO2 emissions per unit of en-
ergy supplied reversed after 2000. {WGIII 1.3, Figure SPM.2, SPM}
Differences in per capita income, per capita emissions and
energy
/media/loftslag/IPPC-2007-ar4_syr.pdf
2015, 2025, 2035 and 2050
North (Blanda) East (Karahnjukar) South (Thorisvatn)
Change in average inflow to the main storage reservoirs
Watershed
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Temperature corrected
Transformation of climate measurements
•Change in temperature
• 0.75 °C/100y 1950-1975
• 1.55
/media/ces/Linnet_Ulfar_CES_2010.pdf
/EPP 2
Stakeholders analysis
26 August 2011 PM/YZ/EPP 3
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/media/loftslag/Group5-Stakeholders_involvement.pdf
a systematic com-
parison of results to observed precipitation has been carried out. Un-
dercatchment of solid precipitation is dealt with by looking only at
days when precipitation is presumably liquid or by considering the
occurrence and non-occurrence of precipitation. Away from non-
resolved orography, the long term means (months, years) of observed
and simulated precipitation are often
/media/ces/Paper-Olafur-Rognvaldsson_92.pdf
Low level flight conditions over Iceland
Low level flight conditions over Iceland
01.05.2023
OUTLOOK 1200 - 1700 GMT.
Winds/temperature at significant levels:
FL050: VRB/05-15KT, -08
FL100: 280/10-20KT, but VRB07KT in the N/weather/aviation/llf-iceland/
an ice strip at 66°42'N and 24°15' W up to 66°59'N and 22°24'W. On the 14th an observation was also received from the weather station „Hraun á Skaga“ on an iceberg 10-11 nm northwest of Skagatá.
On the 22nd an ice strip was observed at 66°49'N and 22°22'W until 66°51'N and 22°09'W.
On the 29th two icebergs were observed in Þverál. IMO issued information and an image of the ice edge 16th June.
Wind
/sea-ice/monthly/2010/nr/2341
An analysis of simulated and observed storm
characteristics
- Can we expect a change in the future?
R.E. Benestad, CES, June 01 2010
Number of cyclones:
RCM
analysis
CCI
(Benestad & Chen, 2006) righttoleftmark
No change in storm frequency?
RCM:
N corresponds
|v| too high
...or simulated wind speeds?
•CCI
•triangulation
Method: storm characteristics
RCM: storms too small
too strong.
Gradient
/media/ces/Benestad_Rasmus_CES_2010.pdf
An ice edge was observed in the area from 67°31'N and 023°35'W to 66°41'N and 23°43'W. Westerlies were a little more prevailing in the Greenland Strait and north of Iceland than on average
/sea-ice/monthly/2010/nr/2340
reported on a floe on 66°12,67'N 27°38,17'W and on the 30th a ship observed a large iceberg in location 66°56'N 24°44,4'W.
Wind directions were close to the average on the Greenland Strait this month
/sea-ice/monthly/2010/nr/2343