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  • 21. CASE_A___Jes_Pedersen_(Region_Midt,_Dk)_Introduction

    ). The surface area of the fiord is approximately 46 km2 and the mean depth is 2.9 m besides a narrow shipping channel with a depth between 7 and 22 m. The catchment area is 517 km2 and dominated by agriculture (75%) with small areas of forests, wetlands, lakes and urban areas. The annual freshwater input is in the order of 100 Mm3, where approximately 70% is channelled through two main creaks /media/loftslag/CASE_A___Jes_Pedersen_(Region_Midt,_Dk)_Introduction.pdf
  • 22. Case_A___Horsens_Fjord

    already exist today. What is crucial is the ability to combine individual solutions from different sectors and think about the positive aspects of climate changes. A good combination can actually create new values for society and make the coming work considerably less expensive. The key concept is good processes between different players involved in climate change adaptation. With an open /media/loftslag/Case_A___Horsens_Fjord.pdf
  • 23. Horsens_case

    a narrow shipping channel with a depth between 7 and 22 m. The catchment area is 517 km2 and dominated by agriculture (75%) with small areas of forests, wetlands, lakes and urban areas. The annual freshwater input is in the order of 100 Mm3, where approximately 70% is channelled through two main creaks Bygholm å and Hansted å, located in the inner part of the fjord. Several smaller streams /media/loftslag/Horsens_case.pdf
  • 24. The weather in Iceland in 2021

    89 54.1 210 129 Sauðanesviti 944.7 107 101 41.8 222 127 Akureyri 636.4 111 98 29.5 172 103 Grímsstaðir 400.4 103 89 14.3 189 97 Skjaldþingsstaðir 1112.4 # 84 61.2 184 115 Dalatangi 1437.2 87 81 47.6 232 145 Höfn í Hornafirði 1327 # 83 /about-imo/news/the-weather-in-iceland-in-2021
  • 25. BIGJ_windrose_2005-2014

    1 2 1 1 Wind rose BIGJ April 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: 114 Calm: 0.88% Variable winds: 0% Average wind speed for wind direction Wind direction (°) Wind speed (knots ) 0 5 10 15 0 45 90 135 180 225 270 315 /media/vedur/BIGJ_windrose_2005-2014.pdf
  • 26. Paper-Olafur-Rognvaldsson_91

    the opportunity to model river runoff and glacier mass balance both in the current climate and also in a hypothetical future climate based on the CE /VO climate change scenarios. The climate of Iceland is largely governed by the interaction of orography and extra-tropical cyclones, both of which can be described quite accurately by present day atmospheric models. As a result, dynamical downscaling /media/ces/Paper-Olafur-Rognvaldsson_91.pdf
  • 27. Paper-Olafur-Rognvaldsson_92

    for Meteorological Research, Reykjavík, Iceland 5Bergen School of Meteorology, Geophysical Insitute, University of Bergen, Norway †Corresponding author: or@belgingur.is, Orkugarður, Grensásvegur 9, 108 Reykjavík ABSTRACT Atmospheric flow over Iceland has been simulated for the period Jan- uary 1961 to July 2006, using the mesoscale MM5 model driven by initial and boundary data from the ECMWF. Firstly /media/ces/Paper-Olafur-Rognvaldsson_92.pdf
  • 28. Kok_and_Veldkamp_editorial_ES-2011-4160

    agreement on use of terminology. Third, all scoping papers stress that there is no silver bullet solution, with a different view on both scale and governance being appropriate depending on the specific case. Buizer et al. (2011) are strongest on this view by presenting and discussing a framework. Termeer et al. (2010) confirm that there is no best governance approach, drawing an analogue /media/loftslag/Kok_and_Veldkamp_editorial_ES-2011-4160.pdf
  • 29. VI_2022_006_extreme

    77 91 109 Hraunaveita 132 116 136 159 117 140 169 Kvíslaveita 48 42 49 58 42 51 61 Sultartangi 66 57 68 80 58 69 84 Þingvallavatn 96 84 99 117 85 102 123 Þórisvatn 47 41 49 57 42 50 60 Tungnaá 76 67 79 92 67 80 98 Ufsarlón 104 92 108 126 93 112 134 36 Figure 19 – 1M5 maps for catchment Hálslón based on the ICRA dataset without projection (top left), with RCP 2.6 and 10th percentile /media/vedurstofan-utgafa-2022/VI_2022_006_extreme.pdf
  • 30. 2010_016

    the largest runoff peak of the year. Compared to the period 1961–1990, a warming of aboutC has already been observed for both watersheds during the period 2000–2009, causing considerable discharge changes in the same direction as the predicted future changes. 8 2 Introduction Increased concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is predicted to lead to changed climate (IPCC, 2007 /media/ces/2010_016.pdf

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