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Enabling Climate Information Services for Europe

ECLISE

Project timeline
Start:
February 2011
Duration:
36 months
End:
January 2014
General Information
Climate and climate change have high impact on society. Better understanding and improved prediction skills of future weather and climate are vital to protect lives, goods and infrastructures. Different sectors of society and infrastructure are more or less designed to accommodate the current level of climate variability. The prospect of a changing climate necessitates adapting these designs. To prevent high costs, it is of paramount importance that the most reliable and accurate climate information is used to underpin the development of new adaptation strategies.
In response to this need, climate scientists, in close cooperation with climate impact specialists, have started to generate and provide information on future climate projections, aimed at supporting adaptation policies. These efforts are often organized at a national level and, at present, differ considerably in the methods used and the level of user involvement. It has been recognized (WMO-WCC3, EU White paper on Adaptation) that coordination of climate services at an international level would greatly advance the benefits of climate science for adaptation policies. This effort must find a way to deal with the strong local nature of climate impacts and adaptation needs.
The central objective of ECLISE is to take the first step towards the realisation of a European Climate Service. ECLISE is a European effort in which researchers, in close cooperation with users, develop and demonstrate local climate services to support climate adaption policies. It does so by providing climate services for several climate-vulnerable regions in Europe, organized at a sectorial level: coastal defence, cities, water resources and energy production. Furthermore, ECLISE will define, in conceptual terms, how a pan-European Climate Service could be developed in the future, based on experiences from the aforementioned local services and the involvement of a broader set of European decision makers and stakeholders.

The Climate Service Center at Hereon is leading work package 7 in ECLISE with the objective to use the experience gained from the case studies defined in the thematic work packages and of the activities developed by national Climate Services to provide a concept for a pan-European Climate Service. Work package 3 in ECLISE is led by the Institute for Coastal Research and will provide consistent meteorological-oceanographic data sets tailored to the need of local users for specific coastal case studies.
EU-Programme Acronym and Subprogramme AreaFP7-ENV-2010, ENV-2010.1.1.4-1
Project TypeCollaborative Project
Contract NumberGrant Agreement 265240
Co-ordinatorKoninklijk Nederlands Meteorologisch Instituut, NL
Total Eligible Costs (€) Hereon Eligible Costs (€) EC Funding for Hereon (€)
4.122.494622.213467.034
Contact Person at Hereon Prof. Guy Brasseur, Climate Service Center, Phone: +49 40 22633 8401, Fax: +49 40 22633 8163 Dr. Ralf Weiße, Institute for Coastal Research, KSA Phone: +49 4152 87 2819, Fax : +49 4152 87 2818
E-mail contact
Worldwide Europe

Participants
Administratia Nationala de Meteorologie (RO), Consiglio Nazionale delle Richerche (IT), Institutul de Geografie (RO), Koninklijk Nederlands Meteorologisch Instituut (NL), Norwegian Meteorological Office, Oslo (NO), Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SE), Technical University of Crete (GR), Uni Research AS (NO), University of Newcastle upon Tyne (UK), Wageningen Universiteit (NL)
Last Update: 16. April 2021