A report from the European Meteorological Society’s annual meeting 2018

If you want to make a difference as a scientist, you need to make sure that people understand the importance of your work. Conferences give you one opportunity to explain what you’ve found out.

I sometimes wonder if the value of attending conferences is sufficiently appreciated. You can save time getting an overview over your field of research and catch up on the latest developments, which would take many weeks just from reading papers (and it gets harder these days to find the time reading papers).

Another benefit is being able to meet colleagues and discuss the latest findings and your results. In addition to sharing your thoughts, you represent your institution and enhance its visibility. Organisations pay a lot of money for increased visibility. 

This week, I have listened to many good and interesting talks at the European Meteorological Society’s (EMS) annual meeting in Budapest (#emsannual2018), a meeting place for weather and climate experts across Europe and the rest of the world.

I usually try to detect the buzz and the main themes and issues discussed by the community during such conferences. My impression is of course subjective and biased by the talks I attended, but I also get an impression about activities within the meteorological and climatological community by reading the posters.

Climate change and its impacts on society were main overarching themes, but with a strong focus on regional aspects. Other headlines were education, weather/impact forecasting, models, historical observations, extremes, attribution of weather events to climate change (World Weather Attribution), and return value analysis.

As usual, the EMS conference covered mainly applied climate science and meteorology. For example, what does “heavy rain” mean and how is it understood by the public? I listened to talks about European and American tornadoes, extreme precipitation, and their radar signatures. Apparently, there are more fatalities from extreme rainfall, but more injuries associated with tornadoes.

The European Copernicus Climate Change Services (C3S) had a strong presence at the conference, and some of the presented work was associated with Horizon2020 projects. Both of these involve large collaborative research efforts across Europe.

I also listened to a session on international cooperation for capacity building and improving climate services in developing countries. But I wonder if some of this effort can be a little overconfident. The reason for my concerns is that such efforts often are based on simulations from a project called CORDEX, but the number of simulations often involves a small number of model runs.

The utility of climate change projections is limited by “the curse of small numbers”, because even perfect models would give misleading results if there also are pronounced but unpredictable natural variations present (Deser et al., 2012). The CORDEX community still has a limited set of regional climate models (RCMs). 

It is possible to use empirical-statistical downscaling to make use of far larger multi-model ensembles, but this type of approach has not played a big role in CORDEX. Proper downscaling should involve both strategies because they have different strengths and weaknesses and can complement each other.

Another thought that struck me was that much of the discussions were about how to get something from next to nothing (i.e. little funding) for such projects. I think there is way too scarce funding for climate services in both developing countries as well as in Europe (perhaps with the exception of C3S in Europe).

Climate change services also involves communication and efforts to make the public understand the opportunities and perils associated with weather events and climate change. 

Science communication was emphasised at the conference, and even highlighted though graphical note taking done by illustrators. One example is the picture below. 

The EMS outreach award was this year given to The Royal Meteorological Society’s free and open online MOOC “Come Rain and Shiny“, which train teachers. But I also learned about another community of climate communicators called  Climate without borders

One lesson from the conference was that people apparently have had enough of the phrase “climate change”, and we need to talk about it in different terms, such as how the temperature has changed where people live. Or how increasing rainfall amounts lead to flooding and how increasing sea-levels inundate coastal regions.

I think that some of the presentations at EMS2018 could have been of interest for a broader audience, but didn’t see much presence from the media, apart from when the TV broadcast award was presented. On the other hand, most of the talks would perhaps be more technical than what the average journalists would like. 

Some talks were difficult to follow, even for experts. That is wasted opportunity, and I think one mistake is to put too much text on the slides, or have too busy slides, and too many of them. It may not necessarily be a big problem if it were the only talk at the conference, but when I spend a whole week attending a conference, and it is easy to get fatigued.

I also think we have developed a bad habit of using too many abbreviations. They require that people have to memorise them while they try to follow the talk. 

I would also advise practicing the talk before the conference by presenting it for people who are not too familiar with the topic. Keep it simple. Don’t expect the audience to digest a difficult and complicated chain of reasons. And don’t try to cram in too many points. The same goes for posters. It is easy to shine by investing a little effort up front. And it’s of course important to keep the time. 

One interesting thought is to have a short session on communication for conferences, based on what the attendees actually take away. The EMS conference has now a new structure compared to earlier years, and I think this change has been successful.

The bottom line is you need to make sure that people understand the importance of your work.

Finally, another new thing this year was the new general data protection regulation (GDPR) in Europe, which restricted the use of photos during the sessions. This may perhaps have limited the distribution of pictures from the talks on social media. 

References


  1. C. Deser, R. Knutti, S. Solomon, and A.S. Phillips, “Communication of the role of natural variability in future North American climate”, Nature Climate Change, vol. 2, pp. 775-779, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/NCLIMATE1562

First of 10 Million Trees to be Planted at the Global Climate Action Summit

American Forests Leads the Way In Accepting U.S. Climate Alliance’s New Challenge

American Forests, the nation’s first and oldest national conservation organization, will celebrate its commitment to the U.S. Climate Alliance’s new Natural and Working Lands Challenge by planting trees at the Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco on September 11, 2018.

“For residents of the 17 U.S. Climate Alliance states where we will plant these trees, this commitment means American Forests is supporting their access to cleaner air and drinking water, reduced flooding, cooler cities, and improved health,” said Jad Daley, President and CEO of American Forests. “The trees we will plant in San Francisco on September 11 are a symbolic first step in progress to slow climate change through trees and forests.”

American Forests announced two major initiatives last week, making it the first nonprofit to commit to the Challenge with the following actions:

Helping the U.S. Climate Alliance states deliver on-the-ground climate solutions by planting at least 10 million trees in those states over the next five years.

Deepening and expanding American Forests’ pro bono technical assistance to the U.S. Climate Alliance to help member states develop ambitious plans and policies to capture and store carbon in forests and other lands.

Starting with the trees planted in San Francisco, ten million trees will deliver an estimated carbon reduction of 4.6 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent over fifty years, offsetting the carbon emissions from burning five billion pounds of coal.

American Forests’ technical support for the Climate Alliance builds on the unprecedented Natural and Working Lands Learning Lab that it hosted in July 2018, with generous support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and in partnership with the Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science, Michigan State University, The Nature Conservancy, World Resources Institute, The Trust for Public Land, American Farmland Trust, and the Coalition on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases.

The Learning Lab brought together delegations of state officials from all the U.S. states in the Alliance with more than 60 experts in the science, policy, and finance of land sector climate mitigation. As part of meeting the challenge, American Forests has committed to the U.S. Climate Alliance to convene additional Learning Labs and provide other related technical support through 2020.

“States hold our future climate in their hands,” said Daley, “In the absence of strong federal leadership, we urgently need states to reduce greenhouse gases in every way possible. American Forests is thrilled that the Climate Alliance’s Natural and Working Lands Challenge commits its member states to use forests and other lands as a major pathway for climate action.”

The Climate Alliance States include: California | Colorado | Connecticut | Delaware | Hawaii | Maryland | Massachusetts | Minnesota |New Jersey | New York | North Carolina | Oregon | Puerto Rico | Rhode Island | Vermont | Virginia | Washington

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ABOUT AMERICAN FORESTS

American Forests inspires and advances the conservation of forests, which are essential to life. We do this by protecting and restoring threatened forest ecosystems, promoting and expanding urban forests, and increasing understanding of the importance of forests. Founded in 1875, American Forests is the oldest national nonprofit conservation organization in the country and has served as a catalyst for many key milestones in the conservation movement, including the founding of the U.S. Forest Service, the national forest system and thousands of forest ecosystem restoration projects and public education efforts. Since 1990, American Forests has planted nearly 60 million trees in all 50 states, resulting in cleaner air and drinking water, restored habitat for wildlife and fish, and the removal of millions of tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

MEDIA CONTACT

Lea Sloan | Vice President of Communications | 202.370.4509 (direct) | 202.330.3253 (mobile) | lsloan@americanforests.org

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Forest Digest: September 2, 2018

September 2nd, 2018|Tags: , , , |

Check out what’s happened this week in forest news!

Carbon Offsets for Urban Trees Are on the Horizon – CityLab

City Forest Credits are an exciting new way to fund urban forestry. Hear from Ian Leahy, American Forests’ Director of Urban Forestry, on how these credits that American Forests has helped develop work.

To save iconic American chestnut, researchers plan introduction of genetically engineered tree into the wildScience Magazine

Researches are looking for approval of regulators to breed genetically modified trees with nonengineered species to plant in forests.

Adapt, move or die: How biodiversity reacted to past climate change – ScienceDaily

Nature is constantly reacting to its environment, and now climate change is forcing it to make tough decisions.

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California State Director

Department

Conservation Programs

Reports to

Director of Forest Conservation

Salary

Commensurate with experience.

FLSA Category

Exempt

Summary

California’s forests are facing unprecedented threats from rising temperatures, increased and prolonged drought, and larger and more intense wildfires. The combined effects of these changes and extreme events are severely stressing region’s iconic forests and diminishing the natural benefits that the Sierra’s forests provide including carbon sequestration, water supply and quality, wildlife habitat, recreation, and timber production. The science is clear that action is needed to now to protect these natural benefits.

The California State Director will direct American Forests’ efforts to create resilient forest landscapes through collaborative conservation. This includes managing a portfolio of restoration projects, building new partnerships, leveraging public and private funding and generally helping to accelerate the pace and scale of forest restoration.

A key focus of the State Director will be to develop and implement a new partnership in the Southern Sierra to scale-up the implementation of climate smart restoration treatments. The Director will collaborate with diverse partners including state and federal agencies, non-profit organizations, forest products industry and private landowners to identify and develop a set of climate smart restoration treatments for the region. The partnership will then leverage public and private funding to implement these restoration treatments in priority watersheds.

American Forests has a long history of partnering with the USDA Forest Service, State of California, Conservation Districts and other partners to implement restoration projects. Since 1991, the work has led to the planting 6 million trees in the state. This position will play a key role in strengthening and deepening American Forests’ role in the state.

Requisite Education or Certifications

Minimum of a Bachelor’s degree in environmental studies, natural resources, or forest management.

Required Experience

American Forests is focused on generating measurable, on-the-ground results that improve forest health. So, most importantly, we are looking for smart people that can get things done. We constantly look for new ways to do conservation, so creativity and flexibility are also important.

Experience in California forest conservation policy, project, or program activity is critical. A combination of education and experience will be considered in determining relative candidate qualifications.

Working Conditions

Up to a month of travel will be required throughout the year within California to engage with partners and support project implementation. Most work will be in a remote office environment.

Location

Sacramento or other strategic California location

Specific Duties

  • Program Development: 60%
    • Develop and manage the Southern Sierra Partnership by working with partners to:
      • Identify climate smart restoration techniques for Southern Sierra landscapes
      • Develop a science based assessment of priority landscapes for restoration
      • Coordinate landscape scale restoration efforts
    • Develop impactful projects in other important landscapes to restore California’s forests in partnership with state and federal agencies
    • Build and maintain relationships with nonprofit conservation organizations, federal agencies and other forest conservation stakeholders.
    • Develop best practices and scientific information from projects to inform discussions about best practices and policies.
    • Conduct site visits to evaluate restoration projects
  • Communications: 15%
    • Serve as an external spokesperson for the organization on matters of forest restoration. This will include speaking at conferences and meetings.
    • Gather and share information from forest conservation projects through publications, website, and social media.
    • Contribute blog posts, magazine articles and other communications pieces.
  • Fundraising: 10%
    • Develop project funding proposals/budgets and determine time frame, funding needs, procedures for accomplishing project, staffing requirements and allotment of resources to various phases of project.
    • In partnership with development team, engage corporate, foundation and other donors to raise funding for projects.
  • Administrative: 15%
    • Provide review and oversight of projects, including tracking project progress and documenting outcomes
    • Manage program budgets and financial reporting in close collaboration with the Finance and Business Operations team.

To Apply

To apply for this position, please send a cover letter and résumé to jobs@americanforests.org. Please state the job title in the subject line.

American Forests is an equal opportunity employer.

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American Forests Responds: Confirmation of Jim Hubbard as USDA Undersecretary for Natural Resources and Environment

August 31st, 2018|Tags: , |

American Forests, the nation’s oldest forest conservation organization, is applauding this week’s confirmation of Jim Hubbard as Undersecretary for Natural Resources and Environment at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Hubbard comes into this leadership role at USDA after a long and distinguished career at the U.S. Forest Service, where he oversaw highly successful programs and new initiatives to advance state and private forestry across America.

“America’s forests have reached a pivot point,” said Jad Daley, President and CEO of American Forests. “We are lucky to have a trusted leader and consensus builder like Jim Hubbard in his new role at USDA to help lead the forest community through this complex time. We urgently need the right policies and investment if we hope to sustain the health of America’s forests, including our national forests, in the face of climate change and other threats.”

Hubbard steps into his new role at USDA, where he will oversee the work of the U.S. Forest Service, when the agency is facing substantial new challenges. The growing extent and intensity of the annual wildfire season, exacerbated by climate change, is just one of many pressures that is complicating the work of the Forest Service and its partners. With its newly released national strategy, Toward Shared Stewardship Across Landscapes: An Outcome-Based Investment Strategy, the Forest Service has set ambitious goals for working across boundaries with states, tribes, private landowners, forest products companies, nonprofits, and other partners to scale up forest management and restoration to create resilient forests. This goal for increased collaboration aligns well with Hubbard’s history at the Forest Service.

“Forest threats like climate change, pests, and wildfire know no boundaries,” said Daley. “The only way we can create resilient forests will be collaboration and innovation at an unprecedented level, including embracing new approaches to forest management that will challenge long-held notions. With his impressive history at the U.S. Forest Service bringing partners together through ‘all lands’ collaborations, Jim Hubbard has shown he is just the right leader to bring our community together for shared landscape-scale forest restoration that is rooted in sound science. We look forward to working with Jim in his new role.”

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Forest Digest: August 26, 2018

August 26th, 2018|Tags: , , , , |

Check out what’s happened this week in forest news!

Planting a mix of tree species ‘could double’ forest carbon storage – CarbonBrief

In addition to creating more efficient carbon sinks, biodiversity also provides benefits to the wildlife that inhabit forests.

5 Reasons We Must “Pre-store” Forests for Climate Change – Medium

American Forests’ President & CEO Jad Daley discusses five ways climate change is affecting the way we care for forests and why we must address the problem head-on.

As Wildfires Rage, Divide Widens Between Democratic, GOP Voters on Climate Change – Morning Consult

Overall, 61 percent of voters said that climate change contributed either some or a lot to recent disasters “such as this year’s wildfires throughout the West.”

Cooling Dallas’s Concrete Jungle – CityLab

Groups in Dallas are using GIS technology and sophisticated data to bring trees to vulnerable populations, where temperatures can reach 10 degrees higher in certain areas due to lack of canopy cover.

How Wildfires Can Affect Climate Change (and Vice Versa) – InsideClimate News

Wildfire is a natural part of earth’s carbon cycles, but human-induced climate change is causing wildfires to become increasingly more damaging – last year, global CO2 emissions from fire reached 32.5 billion tons.

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LIDAR Snapshot: Urban Forests And Justice

August 24th, 2018|Tags: , |

By: Nick Del GiudiceAmerican Forests 

In our previous two articles, we discussed what LiDAR is, and some of its more varied uses, but we didn’t really delve into American Forests’ fascination with this new tech. Our members will know that American Forests is a leader in urban forestry through our Community ReLeaf program, designed to promote equitable access to all the features and benefits of forested urban areas. LiDAR has recently been used to further our understanding of urban forestry, and promises to be a powerful tool in the future. 

The use of aerial LiDAR in an urban environment can create detailed topographical maps just like in regular forestry, but in the urban environment, it can do so much more. The scans can show urban tree canopy percentage and how it changes over the years. Urban forests are not forests in the same way that some isolated woods on open land would be, but their own complex ecosystem, of which buildings and development are a part. Monitoring tree canopy percentage and composition can help urban foresters better assess what action needs to be taken to protect the urban forest that exists, and to assess potential lots where they could expand that same forest. 

aerial view of city

Like LiDAR in wildlands, one of the data components offered is geography, and sometimes it can show an unhappy truth. In many American urban centers, while there may be a great many trees, greenspace, and all of the environmental services they provide, the trees are not necessarily geographically distributed around the city equally. This means that some communities within our cities are deprived of the essential services trees play. Lack of access to greenspace and lower concentration of urban canopy tends to intersect with low income communities already facing many incredibly difficult challenges. More urban canopy means cleaner air, cooler temperatures, cleaner water, and a more beautiful community.

At American Forests, our Community ReLeaf program is focused not just on growing our urban forests, but growing them in an equitable manner that justly provides the services of trees to all people. Environmental justice and social justice are inextricably linked. At the intersection of technology, environmental justice and social justice is tree equity. LiDAR mapping will allow for expansion of our urban forests while more equally spreading their services, growing a better future. 

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American Forests Is First Nonprofit to Accept U.S. Climate Alliance’s Natural and Working Lands Challenge

Washington, D.C. (August 23, 2018) — American Forests, the nation’s oldest forest conservation organization, is proud to announce that it is the first nonprofit organization to accept the U.S. Climate Alliance’s Natural and Working Lands Challenge.

“We are grateful to the U.S. Climate Alliance for providing the leadership on climate change that our nation so desperately needs,” said Jad Daley, President & CEO of American Forests. “We are excited to stand as the first nonprofit organization to commit our expertise and resources to help these states use forests and other lands to slow climate change.”

The new Natural and Working Lands Challenge, which will be featured at September’s Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco, calls on those who accept the challenge to commit to securing natural and working lands as a resilient net sink of carbon. American Forests is accepting this challenge by making two public commitments.

First, American Forests is committing to deepen and expand pro bono technical assistance it has been providing to the U.S. Climate Alliance and its member states, aimed to develop comprehensive strategies to capture and store carbon in forests and other lands. These strategies will be integrated into comprehensive state climate action plans that each Alliance state has committed to develop by 2020 under the new Natural and Working Lands Challenge.

This technical support for the Alliance builds from the unprecedented Natural and Working Lands Learning Lab that American Forests hosted in July 2018, with the generous support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and in partnership with the Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science, Michigan State University, The Nature Conservancy, World Resources Institute, The Trust for Public Land, American Farmland Trust, and the Coalition on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases.

The Learning Lab brought together delegations of state officials from all 16 U.S. states in the Alliance with more than 60 experts in the science, policy, and finance of land sector climate mitigation. As part of meeting the challenge, American Forests has committed to the U.S. Climate Alliance to convene additional Learning Labs and provide other related technical support through 2020.

Second, American Forests is also committing to help the U.S. Climate Alliance states deliver on-the-ground climate solutions by planting at least 10 million trees in Climate Alliance states over the next five years. These trees will deliver an estimated carbon reduction of 4.6 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent over fifty years, offsetting the carbon emissions from burning five billion pounds of coal.

“The science is clear. Forests and other natural lands tip the scale on climate change,” Daley said. “We need to create new forests with tree planting and pre-store the forests we already have to withstand a changing climate. We all should thank the Climate Alliance for using forests and other lands as a climate solution.”

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ABOUT AMERICAN FORESTS

American Forests inspires and advances the conservation of forests, which are essential to life. We do this by protecting and restoring threatened forest ecosystems, promoting and expanding urban forests, and increasing understanding of the importance of forests. Founded in 1875, American Forests is the oldest national nonprofit conservation organization in the country and has served as a catalyst for many key milestones in the conservation movement, including the founding of the U.S. Forest Service, the national forest system and thousands of forest ecosystem restoration projects and public education efforts. Since 1990, American Forests has planted nearly 60 million trees in all 50 states, resulting in cleaner air and drinking water, restored habitat for wildlife and fish, and the removal of millions of tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

MEDIA CONTACT

Lea Sloan | Vice President of Communications | 202.370.4509 (direct) | 202.330.3253 (mobile) | lsloan@americanforests.org

The post American Forests Is First Nonprofit to Accept U.S. Climate Alliance’s Natural and Working Lands Challenge appeared first on American Forests.