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Airfield climate data

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WCSSP India

Wallingford, National Centre for Atmospheric Science, National Oceanography Centre, University of Birmingham, University of Leeds, and the University of Reading. UK research institutes can find out about research calls and how to get involved in the project on our fund management page. Why

News

#3wordweather

’, with half (57%) of people surveyed in the Black Country preferring to say ‘bucketing’. The people of Newcastle and Leeds apparently like the term ‘chucking it down’, with 6 in 10 people from Newcastle (60%) and 58% of people in Leeds describing torrential rain this way. Although many might assume

Michael_Baidu_ppt.pptx

, University of Leeds; 2 University of Leeds/Met Office strategic research group Michael Baidu – [email protected] 1 Objectives • Investigate the model(high res MetUM)’s ability to simulate the interaction between the sea breeze front and boundary layer rolls in the presence of orography. • Compare

Supporting local climate resilience

information to support their planning.  Real-world adaptation in action: developing case studies  But beyond the data, LACS is already proving to be a catalyst for action, helping councils get started, assess risks, and shape adaptation strategies. Working with the University of Leeds, a series

UKNCSP webinar series

International Centre for Climate, University of Leeds  Dr Carol McSweeney, Science Manager - Deputy UKCP Science Lead at the Met Office  Dr Fai Fung, Science Manager - UKCP Science into Services at the Met Office & University of Bristol  James Murphy, Science Fellow - Climate Projections & Uncertainty

Dr Oak Wells

and IT professions working on R&D for observations.  Career background Oak began their career at the Met Office in 2002 as a graduate scientist working on modelling flow over mountains. The Met Office sponsored them to work on a PhD with the University of Leeds which they completed in 2007. In 2010

New project to innovate severe weather warnings in Southern Africa

International team led by the National Centre for Atmospheric Science and University of Leeds have launched a new project to transform access to early weather warning systems for communities in South Africa, Zambia and Mozambique.

and fertiliser use. Professor Doug Parker, National Centre for Atmospheric Science and University of Leeds, stresses that no one approach will meet every need, and that building close relationships with users will be essential to find the best ways to communicate weather warnings. “The accuracy

getting-started.pdf

a reference to the LACS as well as the table with projected changes in climate for the local authority. In Leeds City Council, the climate change team works closely with the Emergency Resilience Team on how climate risks link into corporate risks, the development of a heatwave guidance pack

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