CMUG Integration Meeting Mar 2016
CMUG Integration Meeting Mar 2016
Date: 14 to 16 March 2016
Location: University of Munich (LMU), Luisenstrasse 37, Munich, Germany
Please ask the authors' permission before reproducing any part of these presentations.
Monday 14 March
Welcome
Alex Loew, LMU
Roger Saunders, CMUG, Met Office Head of Satellite Applications
Keynote presentations
EUCLEIA - Attribution of climate change in Earth Observations with models Sonia Seneviratne, ETH Zurich
CCI and beyond - remote sensing for climate, agriculture and hydrology Wolfram Mauser, LMU
Understanding Ocean Variability Arne Biastoch, GEOMAR
Model Development, the atmosphere and satellite observations Robert Pincus, NOAA
CCI data
CCI Open Data Portal project Victoria Bennett, STFC
CCI Open Data Portal Project - support for Obs4MIPS Matthieu Issartel, CGI
CCI Toolbox project - a toolbox for Climate Researchers Rainer Hollmann, DWD
ESMVal Tool for benchmarking Mattia Righi, DLR
CCI Visualisation Tool Philip Eales, Planetary Visions
Tuesday 15 March
CMUG assessment of CCI data - results to date and science plans
Parallel groups:
Group 1: SST, Sea Ice, Ocean Colour
Group 2: Fire, Aerosols, GHG, Ozone
Group 3: Land Cover, Soil Moisture, Clouds
Group 4: Glaciers, AIS, GIS, Sea Level
OC Assimilation David Ford, Met Office
Polar ECV cross assessment Felix Bunzel, MPI-M
Terrestrial ECV cross assessment Silvia Kloster, MPI-M
Coupled model assessment Clare Magand, IPSL
Cross Assessment for Arctic hydrology Ulrika Willén, SMHI
Cross Assessment for Regional Climate Models Ulrika Willén, SMHI
Seasonal forecasting Omar Bellprat, BSC
Cross assessment over the Mediterranean Serge Planton, MétéoFrance
Exploiting CCI products in MIP experiments Serge Planton, MétéoFrance
Parallel breakouts:
CCI Data for CMIP, ESMValTool & Model evaluation
Climate Modelling and the new ECVs
Wednesday 16 March
Interactions & feedback
C3S Update Jean-Noël Thépaut, ECMWF
GCOS status plan Simon Eggleston, WMO
CCI+ Update Pascal Lecomte, ESA
Closing remarks
Pascal Lecomte, ESA
Roger Saunders, Met Office