GHP aims to explore, via an interdisciplinary forum, whether it is timely
to open a discussion on how Evapotranspiration (ET) is defined, measured and used in hydroclimatological research and operational activities.
For more information click here
https://www.gewexevents.org/events/2019-ghp-meeting-by-invitation-only/
http://extremeweather.columbia.edu/workshop-on-correlated-extremes/
The 2019 Annual Science Meeting of the Global Water Futures Program will take place in Saskatoon from May 15 – 17, 2019. The meeting’s primary purpose is to provide all GWF researchers and affiliated highly qualified people to come together and share their scientific findings and outcomes, activities and achievements with the GWF community and users/stakeholders.
For more information click here
8th G-VAP workshop is hosted by AEMET.
The overall objective of the workshop will be to discuss results from the various G-VAP science activities, to discuss results achieved within the wider community, including latest retrieval developments, to foster cooperation and exchange and to discuss the next steps of G-VAP, in particular potential new activities.
For more information click here
The symposium will focus on scientific and technical challenges related to km-scale global and regional climate modeling. It will bring together scientists from the areas of climate modeling, computer sciences and numerical methods – with the aim to address climate and weather time scales, the water cycle and extreme events, as well as emerging supercomputing platforms and software strategies.
The 5th national OzEWEX workshop will explore how well we understand stores and fluxes of water and energy at the landscape scale subject human influences including greenhouse gas emissions, landscape, soil and vegetation modification, water extraction and river regulation.
We want to invite you to a side meeting that focuses on the GEWEX-led Grand Challenge on “Water for the Food Baskets” at the upcoming AGU Fall Meeting in Washington, DC. The aim of this meeting is to foster community engagement and to develop strategies for future projects and collaborations.
The uncertainties about interactions between aerosols, clouds, precipitation, and climate (ACPC) are a fundamental limitation to our ability to understand past climate change and to project future warming reliably.The ACPC initiative aims at a better scientific understanding of these interactions at a fundamental level. The goal is to identify, disentangle, and quantify signals of impacts of aerosol perturbations on clouds, precipitation, and radiation, taking into account adjustments and feedback processes by synergistically exploiting observations and models across scales.
The scientific program is from Wed, 24 April, 9 am to Fri, 26 April, 3pm, and session topics include:
- Deep clouds I : Houston modelling study results
- Deep clouds II : TRACER field campaign preparations
- Shallow clouds: Early results on Southern-Oceans and other relevant topics
Each session topics is followed by extended discussion time for which short pitch presentations are also allowed.
For more information click here.

