USGCRP News
Request for Nominations of Experts for Consideration as Authors and/or Editors for the Fifth Global Environment Outlook (GEO-5) Print E-mail

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ACTION: This is an announcement of an opportunity to recommend experts to the U.S. Government for nomination as Coordinating Lead Authors, Lead Authors, Contributing Authors and Review Editors for the Fifth Global Environment Outlook (GEO-5).  

SUMMARY:  Governments, along with other stakeholder groups, relevant institutions, and United Nations agencies, have been invited to nominate experts to participate in the GEO-5 assessment.  The Department of State is coordinating the recommendation of experts to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) for GEO-5.  The purpose of GEO-5 is to provide a comprehensive, integrated, and scientifically credible global environmental assessment to support decision-making processes at appropriate levels.  Individuals may seek to nominate others (or themselves) directly on http://www.unep.org/geo/nominations/, or through the U.S. government.  For those who wish to submit their nominations through the U.S. government, your nomination must be submitted to UNEP at the website above, and the nomination must also be received at the U.S. Department of State, Office of Environmental Policy, which is coordinating the U.S. Government nomination process, no later than May 12, 2010.  The remainder of this announcement provides background information and describes how to submit recommendations.

The Global Environment Outlook is the primary assessment process of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), which helps keep the global environment under review.  It is a tool that informs decision-making, focusing on assessment priorities and analyzing policy challenges and opportunities to provide policy response options.  It is also a communications tool that brings together diverse stakeholder groups, builds capacity and aims to raise awareness on the status and trends of the environment.

Experts are expected to have a thorough understanding in one or more of the following areas: environmental science; environment and development priorities, challenges and policy; and environmental management or governance.  UNEP will select nominees by matching expertise to specific roles, paying due regard to disciplinary, gender and geographical balance.  Details of the GEO-5 nominating process may be found online at http://www.unep.org/geo/nominations/ and  http://www.globalchange.gov/globalenvironmentoutlook.  To access the nominations form on the UNEP website, please use Username: geo5_2012 and Password: nominee.  Nominations may be made on http://www.unep.org/geo/nominations/.  For nominations to be considered within the U.S. Government nomination process, they must also be submitted to the United States Department of State.  GEO-5 will review the nominations from all participating governments, individuals and organizations and make final decisions on nominees. 

Selection as a U.S. Government nominee does not guarantee selection by GEO-5 itself.  Participants in the GEO process volunteer their time.  Nominated individuals should agree in advance to fulfill the role for which they are nominated, should they be selected to do so by GEO.  Nomination by the U.S. Government to GEO-5 does not imply a commitment by the U.S. Government to provide financial support for participation. 

UNEP may provide travel and subsistence costs for non-Federal participants if requested by the participant, subject to the availability of resources.  Additional guidance on compensation of expenses and remuneration of services will be available on the UNEP website.

How to recommend experts

  1. Refer to the GEO-5 website http://www.unep.org/geo/nominations/ for detailed background information on the 5th Assessment Report. To access the nominations form on the UNEP website, please use Username: geo5_2012 and Password: nominee. The document on GEO-5 nominations identifies the substantive areas covered in each of the chapters of the report.  It is important to note that the time commitment required to carry out different roles in the GEO-5 process varies greatly.
  2. Make sure that any of the experts that you wish to recommend are willing to serve in the role for which they are nominated.
  3. Nominations to be considered within the U.S. Government nomination process must be submitted to the U.S. Department of State, Office of Environmental Policy no later than May 12, 2010.  Complete the GEO-5 nomination form, one for each nominee, including an up-to-date CV, identification of the relevant chapters, and the role for which the individual is being nominated.  Send this information by email to rosenmanrg@state.gov by May 12.  Please note that partial nomination packages will not be considered.

What happens next?

In a process coordinated through the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs, Office of Environmental Policy, technical experts and managers of relevant science and technology programs within the U.S. government will make and review recommendations and forward a slate of nominees to GEO-5 on the basis of their qualifications.  Submission of a nomination to the State Department does not guarantee that the nomination will be forwarded by the U.S. Government to UNEP.

For further information

Richard Rosenman of the Office of Environmental Policy, U.S. Department of State, is serving as the coordinator of this nomination process.  Mr. Rosenman can be reached at 1-202-647-1126, email rosenmanrg@state.gov.  
Disclaimer:  This Public Notice is a request for nominations, and is not a request for applications.  No granting or money is directly associated with this request for suggestions for GEO-5.  There is no expectation of U.S. Government resources or funding associated with any nominations.

 
Request U.S. nomination of experts for consideration as authors for the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report Print E-mail
Thursday, 21 January 2010 16:49

This is an announcement of opportunity to recommend experts to the U.S. Government for nomination as Coordinating Lead Authors, Lead Authors, Review Editors, contributing authors and expert reviewers for the Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Experts are needed in a wide range of fields spanning the science of climate systems and climate change and the scientific, technical, environmental, economic and social aspects of impacts, adaptation, vulnerability and mitigation of climate change. As explained in greater detail below, your recommendations need to be received at the Global Change Research Program (USGCRP), which is coordinating the U.S. nomination process, by 12:00 noon on Monday February 15, 2010. More information is available here.

 
Click Here to View the Webcast of the Press Conference Print E-mail
Wednesday, 17 June 2009 10:41

The White House releases a new report representing a consensus of 13 agencies developed over a year and half, entitled Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States

 
New Assessment of National, Regional Impacts of Climate Change Print E-mail
Tuesday, 16 June 2009 11:44

altNew Report Provides Authoritative Assessment of National, Regional Impacts of Global Climate Change Details Point to Potential Value of Early, Aggressive Action.
Climate change is already having visible impacts in the United States, and the choices we make now will determine the severity of its impacts in the future, according to a new and authoritative federal study assessing the current and anticipated domestic impacts of climate change.
The report, “Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States,” compiles years of scientific research and takes into account new data not available during the preparation of previous large national and global assessments. It was produced by a consortium of experts from 13 U.S. government science agencies and from several major universities and research institutes. With its production and review spanning Republican and Democratic administrations, it offers a valuable, objective scientific consensus on how climate change is affecting—and may further affect—the United States.
“This new report integrates the most up-to-date scientific findings into a comprehensive picture of the ongoing as well as expected future impacts of heat-trapping pollution on the climate experienced by Americans, region by region and sector by sector,” said John P. Holdren, Assistant to the President for Science and Technology and director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. “It tells us why remedial action is needed sooner rather than later, as well as showing why that action must include both global emissions reductions to reduce the extent of climate change and local adaptation measures to reduce the damage from the changes that are no longer avoidable.”

Webcast:


 
Call for U.S. Nominations IPCC Special Report Print E-mail
Monday, 15 June 2009 17:26

Call for Nominations of U.S. experts to serve as Authors and/or Review Editors of the IPCC Special Report “Managing the Risks of Extreme Events and Disasters to Advance Climate Change Adaptation” 
16 June 2009

At the IPCC’s most recent plenary meeting on 21-23 April, governments approved the production of a “Special Report on Managing the Risks of Extreme Events and Disasters to Advance Climate Change Adaptation."   
Under IPCC procedures, member governments have an opportunity to provide nominations for authors to be involved in the production of each chapter in the report.

The subject report will require the contributions of experts who can integrate the findings of the climate change science; vulnerability, impacts, and adaptation to extreme events; and disaster risk management communities. Nominees should have extensive expertise pertinent to the subject matter covered, and will generally be recognized in their field of expertise.


Further information on this request please visit: www.globalchange.gov/ipcc/extremes


FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: 
David Allen, U.S. Global Change Research Program, Suite 250, 1717
Pennsylvania Ave, NW., Washington,
DC 20006. (Phone: 202–419–3486, Fax: 202–223–3065, Email:
dallen@usgcrp.gov); or visit the USGCRP 
Web site at http://www.globalchange.gov

 
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