travelling in the northern half of the country.
The forecast is as follows:
Northerly 20-25 m/s and snow in the Westfjords in Friday evening but north 18-28 m/s in the western half of Iceland in Saturday morning. Lighter winds in the east.
Moderate to heavy snowfall or sleet in the northern half of Iceland and in the Eastfjords, sleet in the Southeast but mainly dry in the Southwest
/about-imo/news/nr/2606
on Intraplate Seismicity in Central Fennoscandia
Annakaisa
Korja, Uski, M., Lund, B., Grigull, S., Nironen, M., E., Högdahl, K. Relative earthquake location in
Southern Iceland Bergþóra S. Þorbjarnardóttir and
Ingi Þ. Bjarnason This year's update on the Burträsk
fault seismicity Darina Buhcheva
and Björn LundThe SIL-system from an operational standpointJón Söring
Communication
between
/norsem/norsem2016/program/poster
to the "Adaptation of the Swiss Guidelines for supporting structures for Icelandic conditions (IMO Rep. 99013)" (IMO Memo TóJ-2003-05, author T. Jóhannesson) (pdf 0.03 Mb)
Remarks on the design of avalanche braking mounds based on experiments in 3, 6, 9 and 34 m long chutes (IMO Int. Rep. 03024, 2003, authors T. Jóhannesson and Kr. M. Hákonardóttir) (pdf 0.8 Mb)
Field observations and laboratory
/avalanches/imo/protective/
incident solar radiation with observations. Red squares: the
baseline period (1971-2000) mean of the global radiation observed at Jokioinen in southwestern Fin-
land (60.8◦N, 23.5◦E) for each calendar month. The thick black curve: the corresponding quantity
as an average of the simulations performed with 18 global climate models. Grey shaded area: mean
± standard deviation of the simulations
/media/ces/CES_D2.4_solar_CMIP3.pdf
5
Days since 1st sep.
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o
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ise
d
Q,
W
S,
SW
E Q
WS
SWE
vhm148
S O N D J F M A M J J A
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Q,
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S,
SW
E Q
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SWE
vhm149
S O N D J F M A M J J A
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vhm205
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/media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2015/VI_2015_007.pdf
Projects
involving sh
Concise info
Executive
summaries
Downloadable
"Stakeholder
friendly" info
Stakeholder Relevance of the CES Project
Jenny Gode, 31 May 2010
Research programme
"Translators"
F
act
sheets
W
eb
page
Stee
ring
co
mm
ittee
Visits
W
o
rkshops
R
efe
re
nce
g
ro
up
s
E
x
.
su
mm
a
rie
s
M
eetings
Stakeholders
Energy companies
Energy authorities
Decision makers
Other stakeholders
/media/ces/Gode_Jenny_CES_2010.pdf
a comprehensive assessment of the impact of climate change on
renewable energy resources in the Nordic area including hydropower, wind power, bio‐fuels and
solar energy.
M i bj i f h CES P j
An increase of uncertainty about the future of renewable resources under climate change is a key issue for the
energy sector. Some renewable energy resources are likely to increase their productivity
/media/ces/ces_risk_flyer.pdf
....................................... 16
CLIMATE PROJECTIONS
Kjellström, E., Drews, M., Christensen, J.H., Haugen, J.E., Haakenstad, H. and Shkolnik, I.
An ensemble of regional climate change scenarios for the Nordic countries........................................................ 18
Benestad, R.E.
An analysis of simulated and observed storm characteristics
/media/ces/ces-oslo2010_proceedings.pdf
≤
≤
>−
0
00
0
)(
TTif
TTifTTDDFsnow
≤
>−
0
00
0
)(
TTif
TTifTTDDFice
Mean annual temperature difference
Difference relative to 1971-2000
Difference between 25% warmest and 25% coldest years
barb2right +1°C (25% warmest)
barb2right -0.7°C (25% coldest)
barb2right +1.7°C
Catchment elevation (m.a.s.l)
Catchment elevation (m.a.s.l)
s
n
o
w
me
l
t
(
mm
/
d
)
g
l
a
c
i
a
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me
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t
/media/ces/Crochet_Philippe_CES_2010.pdf