
How Will Climate Warming Likely Affect the Incidence and Severity
of Storms, Floods and Droughts in North America?
The United States and Canada Symposium on North American Climate
Change and Weather Extremes was convened in Atlanta during October
1999. This three day meeting was convened in Atlanta by the Climate
Institute under the joint sponsorship of the Canadian Climate
Programme, the US National Climate Program, Environment Canada,
US Environmental Protection Agency and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
The meeting pulled together climate
modelers, computer experts, climate impacts specialists, and
those involved in response strategies such as emergency preparedness
officials and insurance industry representatives to discuss what
we know about likely changes in frequency of extreme weather
events in North America should the climate warm as anticipated.
A major focus of the discussions was how to fill in the gaps
in our understanding of likely changes in occurrence and severity
of extreme weather events and how to strengthen research efforts
in both the US and Canada to provide decision makers a better
grasp of likely future extreme weather occurrences.
Besides the
US and Canadian representatives, the Symposium acquired a truly
North American character with the participation of one Mexican
representative, Luis Roberto Acosta, Director of Sistema Internacional
de Monitoreo Ambiental (SIMA). Acosta, who also directs Latin
American programs of the Climate Institute, is now spearheading
the effort to build the world’s highest altitude CO2 observatory
in Perote in the State of Veracruz, Mexico. The observatory will
also monitor the movement of dust particles from Africa that
might affect the climate of the Western Hemisphere as well as
UV radiation. On May 20, 2005 Fidel Herrera, Governor of Veracruz,
announced his State’s
intention to fund the construction of this observatory with
construction expected to start early spring of 2006.
Meeting Results
- Research
Agenda.pdf - an Adobe Acrobat file (150 KB) containing
the research agenda that evolved out of the symposium.
- Proceedings.pdf -
an Adobe Acrobat file (1.2 MB) containing the invited papers
presented at the meeting.
- Newsletter.ppt -
a PowerPoint file (10 MB) containing an article written by
Nancy Wilson of the Climate Institute for the Climate Alert
published in April 2000.
