Home CCSP InfoSheets Fact Sheets Strategic Plan Overview (CCSP Fact Sheet 3, January 2006) |
This Fact Sheet also is available as PDF file. Hardcopies can be ordered from the online GCRIO catalog.
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The Strategic Plan for the Climate Change Science Program was released in July 2003.The document is the first comprehensive update of a national plan for climate and global change research since the original U.S. Global Change Research Program strategy was issued at the inception of the program in 1989.
Development of the Strategic PlanIn July 2002, the CCSP undertook a year-long process to prepare a new 10-year strategic plan for the program.The planning process was designed to ensure a comprehensive examination of research and observation needs, transparent review by the national and international scientific and stakeholder communities, and establishment of defined goals for research on climate and global change. Scientists and research program managers from the 13 participating agencies and the Climate Change Science Program Office drafted the Strategic Plan.The Administration released a CCSP Discussion Draft Strategic Plan for public review in November 2002. A Climate Change Science Program Workshop, held in December 2002 in Washington, DC, was designed to facilitate extensive discussion and comments on the draft plan.The workshop was attended by 1,300 scientists and other participants, including individuals from 47 states and 36 nations. Written comments on the Discussion Draft Strategic Plan were submitted during a public review period ending in January 2003.The comments amounted to nearly 900 pages of input from hundreds of scientists, representatives of interest groups, and interested members of the lay public. In addition, a special committee of the National Academy of Sciences’ National Research Council (NRC) reviewed the discussion draft plan at the request of the CCSP and reported its recommendations in February 2003. The Strategic Plan for the U.S. Climate Change Science Program was released in July 2003 after consideration of all of the workshop discussions, the full range of written public review comments, and the NRC review of the discussion draft plan, as well as an extensive internal U.S. Government review process. The CCSP Strategic Plan will guide research activities sponsored or conducted by the U.S. Government. It will be modified as warranted by the emergence of key findings and important new scientific questions of public interest.
Goals of the Climate change Science ProgramThe CCSP adds significant integrative value to the individual Earth and climate science missions of its 13 participating agencies and departments, and their national and international partners. A critical role of the interagency program is to coordinate research and integrate and synthesize information to achieve results that no single agency, or small group of agencies, could attain. In its Strategic Plan, the CCSP adopted five overarching scientific goals. By developing information responsive to these goals, the program will ensure that it addresses the most important climate related issues.
Core ApproachesThe CCSP employs four core approaches in working toward its goals. Each of these components of the program is discussed in greater detail in the CCSP Strategic Plan.
Implementing the Strategic PlanIn February 2004, the NRC review committee issued a second public report, Implementing Climate and Global Change Research: A Review of the Final U.S. Climate Change Science Program Strategic Plan, expressing the committee’s conclusions on the content, objectivity, quality, and comprehensiveness of the updated Strategic Plan, on the process used to produce it, and on the proposed process for developing subsequent findings to be reported by the CCSP. The report made a number of recommendations on implementing the Strategic Plan.The NRC review concluded:
The CCSP is now engaged in implementing the Strategic Plan. Full text of the Strategic Plan can be found online.
This fact sheet was generated by the Climate Change Science Program Office in collaboration with an interagency working group composed of representatives of the 13 Federal agencies participating in the U.S. Global Change Research Program. |
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