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Cynthia Rosenzweig 1, Jim Jones 3, Jerry Hatfield 4, Alex Ruane 1, and Jonathan Winter 2 1 NASA GISS, 2 Columbia University, 3 University of Florida, 4.

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Presentation on theme: "Cynthia Rosenzweig 1, Jim Jones 3, Jerry Hatfield 4, Alex Ruane 1, and Jonathan Winter 2 1 NASA GISS, 2 Columbia University, 3 University of Florida, 4."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cynthia Rosenzweig 1, Jim Jones 3, Jerry Hatfield 4, Alex Ruane 1, and Jonathan Winter 2 1 NASA GISS, 2 Columbia University, 3 University of Florida, 4 USDA-Ames American Geophysical Union, AgMIP Town Hall December 4th, 2012 Sonali McDermid 1

2 Incorporate state-of-the-art climate products as well as crop and agricultural trade model improvements in coordinated regional and global assessments of future climate impacts Include multiple models, scenarios, locations, crops and participants to explore uncertainty and impact of data and methodological choices Collaborate with regional experts in agronomy, economics and climate to build strong basis for applied simulations addressing key climate-related questions Improve scientific and adaptive capacity for major agricultural regions in the developing and developed world Develop framework to identify and prioritize adaptation strategies Link to key on-going efforts –CCAFS, Global Futures, Harvest Choice, Yield Gap Atlas, SERVIR –National Research Programs, National Adaptation Plans, IPCC, ISI-MIP 2 Objectives

3 Incorporate state-of-the-art climate products as well as crop and agricultural trade model improvements in coordinated regional and global assessments of future climate impacts Include multiple models, scenarios, locations, crops and participants to explore uncertainty and impact of data and methodological choices Collaborate with regional experts in agronomy, economics, and climate to build strong basis for applied simulations addressing key climate-related questions Improve scientific and adaptive capacity for major agricultural regions in the developing and developed world Develop framework to identify and prioritize adaptation strategies Link to key on-going efforts –CCAFS, Global Futures, MOSAICC, Yield Gap Analysis, SERVIR, MACSUR … –National Research Programs, National Adaptation Plans, IPCC, ISI-MIP … Objectives

4 Track 1: Model Improvement and Intercomparison Track 2: Climate Change Multi-Model Assessment Cross-Cutting Themes: Uncertainty, Aggregation and Scaling, Representative Agricultural Pathways Driven by Data at Sentinel Sites Silver Gold Platinum Two-Track Science Approach

5 Benefits include: - Improved capacity for climate, crop and economic modeling to identify and prioritize adaptation strategies - Consistent protocols, scenarios and data access - Improved regional assessments of climate impacts - Facilitated transdisciplinary collaboration and active partnerships - Contributions to National Adaptation Plans = Wheat = Maize = Rice 0˚ 90˚ -90˚ 45˚ -45˚ = Sugarcane Morogoro Ames Wongan Hills Delhi Ludhiana Ayr Los Baños Piracicaba Shizukuishi Rio Verde La Mercy Haarweg Lusignan Balcarce Nanjing AgMIP Sentinel Sites Regions and Crop Model Pilots

6 Capacity Building and Decision Making Regional vulnerability Adaptation strategies Trade policy instruments Technology exchange Climate Team Crop Modeling Team Economics Team Information Technology Team Improvements and Intercomparisons Crop models Agricultural economic models Scenario construction Aggregation methodologies Cross-Cutting Themes Uncertainty Aggregation and Scaling Representative Agricultural Pathways Assessments Regional Global Crop-specific Key Interactions Soils Water Resources Pests and Diseases Livestock and Grasslands Teams, Linkages and Outcomes


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