supported by the
majority of responses to one of the quantitative
questions (to which 13 out of 20 participants
responded on a five-point Likert scale—strongly
agree, agree, neither agree or disagree, disagree,
strongly disagree), where 11 respondents “agreed”
that the activities in the workshop helped them to
share their views and opinions with others, and the
other two “neither agreed nor disagreed
/media/loftslag/Moellenkampetal_etal-2010.pdf
10:25 – 10:40
Icelandic Perspective and Hemispheric Overview (Chair: Edward Hanna)
Iceland: on the northern flank of the jet stream – T Jónsson
Circumpolar Vortex: Calculations and Correlations – P Jones
Response of the wintertime atmospheric circulation to current and projected Arctic sea ice
decline – G Magnusdottir
Group Discussion
10:40 – 11:00 Coffee Break
11:00 – 12:45
11:00 – 11:20/media/loftslag/Mid-Latitudes-Agenda1_nov2013EH.pdf
20–30 years. It will address how the conditions for
production of renewable energy in the Nordic area might change due to global warming. It will focus on the
potential production and the future safety of the production systems as well as uncertainties.
Risk Assessment
The target user group for the tool, which is aimed to
be a first step in determining a strategy for identifying
potential risks
/media/ces/ces_risk_flyer.pdf
approximately centred around Iceland: the outer domain with
43 42 grid points spaced at 27 km (1134 1107 km), the intermediate domain with 9590 grid
points spaced at 9 km, and the inner domain with 196 148 grid points spaced at 3 km. The
northwest corner of the outer domain covers a part of the southeast coastal region of Greenland.
Otherwise, the only landmass included in the model domain
/media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2013/2013_001_Nawri_et_al.pdf
Of Precipitation In Latvia. XXV Nordic Hydrological conference, Northern Hydrology and its Global Role, 11-13 August, 2008, Reykjavik, Iceland. ISBN 978-9979-68-238-7. NHP Report No. 50, P. 134-142.
Hisdal, H., Barthelmie, R., Lindström, G., Kolcova, T., Kriauciuniené, J. & Reihan, A. (2007). Statistical Analysis. In: J. Fenger (Ed.) Impacts of Climate Change on Renewable Energy Sources: Their role
/ces/publications/nr/1943
-1996
– 1997-2002
– Post 2002
Overall Effect of Wind Speed on
Damages
Damaged Homes By Wind Categories
100
120
0
20
40
60
80
< 120 120-
129
130-
139
140-
149
> 149
P
e
r
c
e
n
t
Damaged Homes (Cum.
Percent)
Average Home Size By Year
Built Categories
Average Home Size By Year Built Categories
2450
2500
2550
2150
2200
2250
2300
2350
2400
Pre 1980 80-96 97-2002 Post 2002
Avg. Sq. Feet
Damaged Homes
/media/loftslag/FMI_-_Disaster_Mitigation.pdf