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The U.S. Climate Variability and Predictability Research Program (CLIVAR)

Friday, May 8, 2009


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U.S. CLIVAR produces a monthly electronic news-gram which includes timely information regarding upcoming meetings in addition to announcing climate research opportunities. To subscribe, send an email to with "subscribe" in the subject header and include your contact information.

 

  

  

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Welcome to the U.S. CLIVAR Web Site!

CLIVAR (Climate Variability and Predictability) is an international, interdisciplinary research effort within the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) focusing on the variability and predictability of the slowly varying components of the climate system. CLIVAR investigates the physical and dynamical processes in the climate system that occur on seasonal, interannual, decadal and centennial time-scales. CLIVAR recgnizes that a critical measure of sucess in its research program is a transferal of insight and knowledge to routine production of climate forecasts, information and products. These forecasts and climate products hae inherent value to decision makers.

U.S. CLIVAR has identified improved predictive capability as the main objective to leave as its legacy. The U.S. CLIVAR Committee steers the U.S. CLIVAR research enterprise along with three Panels to guide and implement the program in the broad functional goals of predictability/prediction; process and model improvement, and phenomena/observations/synthesis. The Panels develop and coordinate research plans and activities, provide input to agency programs, and assess achievement using measurable performance metrics (e.g. milestones).

2009 Research Opportunities


US CLIVAR Summit 2009

The US CLIVAR Summit will take place 15-17 July 2009 in Annapolis, MD.




U.S. CLIVAR activities are supported by:

  ccsp

 

Science Tidbits    

5 March 2009 - Can sea levels diagnose the health of part of the world's ocean circulation?

19 February 2009 - North Atlantic Ocean is world's 'climate superpower'

28 January 2009 - Global Warming and Atlantic Hurricane Intensity

22 October 2008 - British scientists go cloud-hopping in the Pacific to improve climate predictions

 

More News

Announcements

2009 Summit Information

AMOC Annual Science Meeting 4-6 May 2009 (Annapolis, MD) Registration Open

Climate Process Team Review paper online

Western Boundary Current Workshop presentations available

 

 

More Announcements

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Tel: 202-419-3471 / Fax: 202-223-3064