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eGAFOR (enhanced, electronic and European GAFOR) is a new graphical colour-coded forecast for general aviation (GA). It was developed by
Greece, Cyprus and Israel have formed the East Mediterranean Storm Naming Group. Greece has named its first Storm ‘Athina’.
EUMETNET would like to welcome Klemen Bergant, who has taken over from Eric Petermann as the new Executive Director from
The EUMETNET AutoPollen activity was featured in a report made at the Annual Congress of the European Academy of Allergy

EVENTS

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  • 13
    13.November.Monday

    5th International Conference on Reanalysis

    All day
    2017.11.13-2017.11.17
    Rome, Italy
    Rome, Italy

    The Copernicus Climate Change Service is holding the 5th International Conference on Reanalysis (ICR5) over five days, 13 – 17 November 2017 in Rome, Italy.

    ICR5 will provide us the opportunity to review progress and discuss future plans in key areas, including:

    Status of current production systems
    Observation rescue activities
    Developments in observational databases
    Developments in data assimilation
    Applications, user requirements and feedback
    Plans for future reanalyses

    Climate research has benefited over the years from the continuing development of reanalysis. As reanalysis datasets become more diverse (atmosphere, ocean and land components), more complete (moving towards Earth-system coupled reanalysis), more detailed, and of longer timespan, community efforts to evaluate and intercompare them become more important.

    The conference will bring together reanalysis producers, observation providers, numerical modellers and the user community to review current reanalysis activities and to discuss user needs for future reanalyses.

    Through this conference, we aim to assess the merits and review the progress in reanalyses, to monitor climate variations and support policy makers to develop adaptation policies, and to provide complementary information to other climate sources.

    The conference will be organized around five main topics: (1) status and plans for future reanalyses, (2) observations for reanalyses, (3) methods for reanalyses, (4) evaluation of reanalyses and (5) applications of reanalyses.

  • 14
    14.November.Tuesday

    5th International Conference on Reanalysis

    All day
    2017.11.14-2017.11.17
    Rome, Italy
    Rome, Italy

    The Copernicus Climate Change Service is holding the 5th International Conference on Reanalysis (ICR5) over five days, 13 – 17 November 2017 in Rome, Italy.

    ICR5 will provide us the opportunity to review progress and discuss future plans in key areas, including:

    Status of current production systems
    Observation rescue activities
    Developments in observational databases
    Developments in data assimilation
    Applications, user requirements and feedback
    Plans for future reanalyses

    Climate research has benefited over the years from the continuing development of reanalysis. As reanalysis datasets become more diverse (atmosphere, ocean and land components), more complete (moving towards Earth-system coupled reanalysis), more detailed, and of longer timespan, community efforts to evaluate and intercompare them become more important.

    The conference will bring together reanalysis producers, observation providers, numerical modellers and the user community to review current reanalysis activities and to discuss user needs for future reanalyses.

    Through this conference, we aim to assess the merits and review the progress in reanalyses, to monitor climate variations and support policy makers to develop adaptation policies, and to provide complementary information to other climate sources.

    The conference will be organized around five main topics: (1) status and plans for future reanalyses, (2) observations for reanalyses, (3) methods for reanalyses, (4) evaluation of reanalyses and (5) applications of reanalyses.

  • 15
    15.November.Wednesday

    5th International Conference on Reanalysis

    All day
    2017.11.15-2017.11.17
    Rome, Italy
    Rome, Italy

    The Copernicus Climate Change Service is holding the 5th International Conference on Reanalysis (ICR5) over five days, 13 – 17 November 2017 in Rome, Italy.

    ICR5 will provide us the opportunity to review progress and discuss future plans in key areas, including:

    Status of current production systems
    Observation rescue activities
    Developments in observational databases
    Developments in data assimilation
    Applications, user requirements and feedback
    Plans for future reanalyses

    Climate research has benefited over the years from the continuing development of reanalysis. As reanalysis datasets become more diverse (atmosphere, ocean and land components), more complete (moving towards Earth-system coupled reanalysis), more detailed, and of longer timespan, community efforts to evaluate and intercompare them become more important.

    The conference will bring together reanalysis producers, observation providers, numerical modellers and the user community to review current reanalysis activities and to discuss user needs for future reanalyses.

    Through this conference, we aim to assess the merits and review the progress in reanalyses, to monitor climate variations and support policy makers to develop adaptation policies, and to provide complementary information to other climate sources.

    The conference will be organized around five main topics: (1) status and plans for future reanalyses, (2) observations for reanalyses, (3) methods for reanalyses, (4) evaluation of reanalyses and (5) applications of reanalyses.

  • 16
    16.November.Thursday

    5th International Conference on Reanalysis

    All day
    2017.11.16-2017.11.17
    Rome, Italy
    Rome, Italy

    The Copernicus Climate Change Service is holding the 5th International Conference on Reanalysis (ICR5) over five days, 13 – 17 November 2017 in Rome, Italy.

    ICR5 will provide us the opportunity to review progress and discuss future plans in key areas, including:

    Status of current production systems
    Observation rescue activities
    Developments in observational databases
    Developments in data assimilation
    Applications, user requirements and feedback
    Plans for future reanalyses

    Climate research has benefited over the years from the continuing development of reanalysis. As reanalysis datasets become more diverse (atmosphere, ocean and land components), more complete (moving towards Earth-system coupled reanalysis), more detailed, and of longer timespan, community efforts to evaluate and intercompare them become more important.

    The conference will bring together reanalysis producers, observation providers, numerical modellers and the user community to review current reanalysis activities and to discuss user needs for future reanalyses.

    Through this conference, we aim to assess the merits and review the progress in reanalyses, to monitor climate variations and support policy makers to develop adaptation policies, and to provide complementary information to other climate sources.

    The conference will be organized around five main topics: (1) status and plans for future reanalyses, (2) observations for reanalyses, (3) methods for reanalyses, (4) evaluation of reanalyses and (5) applications of reanalyses.

  • 17
    17.November.Friday

    5th International Conference on Reanalysis

    All day
    2017.11.17-2017.11.17
    Rome, Italy
    Rome, Italy

    The Copernicus Climate Change Service is holding the 5th International Conference on Reanalysis (ICR5) over five days, 13 – 17 November 2017 in Rome, Italy.

    ICR5 will provide us the opportunity to review progress and discuss future plans in key areas, including:

    Status of current production systems
    Observation rescue activities
    Developments in observational databases
    Developments in data assimilation
    Applications, user requirements and feedback
    Plans for future reanalyses

    Climate research has benefited over the years from the continuing development of reanalysis. As reanalysis datasets become more diverse (atmosphere, ocean and land components), more complete (moving towards Earth-system coupled reanalysis), more detailed, and of longer timespan, community efforts to evaluate and intercompare them become more important.

    The conference will bring together reanalysis producers, observation providers, numerical modellers and the user community to review current reanalysis activities and to discuss user needs for future reanalyses.

    Through this conference, we aim to assess the merits and review the progress in reanalyses, to monitor climate variations and support policy makers to develop adaptation policies, and to provide complementary information to other climate sources.

    The conference will be organized around five main topics: (1) status and plans for future reanalyses, (2) observations for reanalyses, (3) methods for reanalyses, (4) evaluation of reanalyses and (5) applications of reanalyses.