CLARITY at EGU 2019
Austria Center Vienna (ACV), Vienna, Austria
Agenda
The poster is on display on Wednesday, 10 Apr 2019, 08:00-19:30 in Hall X3 at board number X3.113. Alessandra Capolupo will be happy to tell you more about CLARITY, and will be at the poster in person from 10:45 to 12:30.
The intensity and impact of climate change induced extreme weather events, such as heat waves or floods, is to a large extent determined by the characteristics of built and natural environment. Urban resilience measures therefore need to be identified and designed locally to reduce impacts by altering the specific settlement characteristics and improving the microclimate conditions. To support urban planners in choosing the adequate adaptation options for specific urban infrastructure projects, climate projections should capture the variations at urban/district scale for key hazard indicators. Such refinement can be achieved by integrating the urban microclimate analysis in the conventional GCM-RCM (Global Climate Model - Regional Climate Model) downscaling approach. This is an emerging and interdisciplinary research area In the field of climate risk modelling, where climate science, earth observation, urban studies, environmental design and building technology can contribute to identify suitable approaches.
The H2020-CLARITY project (www.clarity-h2020.eu) aims to provide such support by developing an innovative hazard/impact modelling methodology that takes into account urban microclimate variability in an easy to use Climate Service. The microclimate effects are quantified by exploiting the potential of the wide amount of data generated by satellite earth observations and made available at pan-European level through the Copernicus datasets. Specific algorithms and GIS spatial analysis tools are used to process the data and to extract detailed information related to key parameters linked to urban morphology and surface type (e.g. albedo, emissivity, green fraction, runoff coefficient, etc.). Resulting “local” variations of the hazards are available for advanced automated screening and expert studies through localized data packages that combine complementary hazards, exposure and vulnerability data for specific region with a choice of relevant adaptation measures.
More information: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/EGU2019-8607.pdf.
The presentation is part of the session 'Climate Services - Underpinning Science', and takes place in room N1.
Climate research and modelling efforts provide a large amount of data and knowledge on how the climate will change in different regions of the world. Translating available climate data such that decision makers can incorporate the information into their decisions is crucial to increase resilience at local level.
Within the EU-Horizon-2020 funded project CLARITY (http://www.clarity-h2020.eu) an integrated Climate Services Information System (CSIS) is being developed to transfer knowledge about climate change and its implications for urban areas and traffic infrastructure to decision-makers and thus to support urban infrastructure planning. CSIS implements the standardized CLARITY methodological framework that comprises the hazard characterisation, exposure analysis, vulnerability analysis, risk and impact assessment and the identification and appraisal of adaptation options
More information about the presentation can be found on the EGU webpage: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/EGU2019-8978.pdf.