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News Letter August 2023

The full version of HIWeather News Letter August 2023
August 2023
August 2023

Welcome to the August edition of the HIWeather newsletter

What a summer/winter it has been! Records tumbling all over the place, and sadly many communities disrupted and lives lost. Here in the UK, after a record-breaking hot spell in late May and early June, we have had a rather cool, wet summer, prompting many people to jet off to hotter climes – which have sometimes turned out rather hotter than they expected.

We were delighted to welcome the Impact-based Forecast and Warning flagship project team to a hybrid meeting at Exeter back in April when excellent progress was made towards clarifying the gaps in our knowledge of how to produce, communicate and use impact-based warnings. That work is continuing, and the team are steadily refining their draft paper.

I enjoyed a stimulating week in Berlin in July at the IUGG quadrennial assembly as co-convenor of the session on weather and climate extremes. It was good to reach out to this community with presentations which referenced HIWeather’s work. The highlight of the assembly, however, was the HIWeather booth created by the ICO, which was hugely popular and reached thousands of delegates who may not have considered attending any of the directly relevant sessions. Well done the ICO!

We are increasingly looking towards the wrapping up of HIWeather next year and how to ensure its legacy is long-lasting. Sadly, my proposal to the Royal Society to host the conference finale was unsuccessful, so we are currently exploring other avenues for a venue and host for this event.

Meanwhile it is great to read of the work being pushed forward in the flagship projects that is described in this newsletter. The Value Chain project is continuing to gain momentum as it broadens its work. The Citizen Science flagship project has embarked on a new series of webinars with YESS, and has made excellent progress with its guidance note on crowd sourcing. And good progress is being made towards defining a student HIWeather social science project as part of the Paris 2024 RDP.

Finally, I should mention the World Weather Research Programme (WWRP) Scientific Steering Committee which will have met by the time you read this, and which will be turning its attention to defining the projects in its new implementation plan, to start next year. Many of them have close links with HIWeather, and we shall be looking to embed aspects of HIWeather project into them.

 

Brian

Brian Golding

Co-chair of HIWeather

NEWS

Relevant Meetings

  • EMS:

    Four team members of the HIWeather project (Brian Golding, Rob Neal, Jeff Da Costa, David Hoffmann) are chairing a session on the value chain at this year’s European Meteorological Society (EMS) Annual Meeting in Bratislava, SK from 4-8 September.
  • UCL Warnings Conference:

    Date: 11 - 13 September 2023, Location: UCL Institute for Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH.

    Sally Potter (GNS Science, NZ) and Brian Golding (UK Met Office) will present as convenor at Session 2A (13:30-15:00): Research progress, gaps and challenges for High Impact Weather.

Calls & Requests

Citizen Science Project

Citizen Science Project

Warning Value Chain Project

Warning Value Chain Project

HIWeather Endorsement

HIWeather Endorsement

Facebook users

Facebook users

Twitter users

Twitter users

WeChat users

WeChat users

Warning Value Chain Project

We are developing an inventory of existing examples of where the value chain has been applied, based on a systematic review of academic and grey literature and workshops. 

If you know of relevant reports in peer reviewed journals or in the grey literature, please could you forward them to the project office at hiwico@cma.gov.cn


HIWeather Endorsement

Link your project to HIWeather for increased visibility

The Steering Group (SG) of the High Impact Weather (HIWeather) Project provides endorsement for projects, programs and initiatives that plan to contribute to the goals of HIWeather as outlined in the HIWeather Implementation Plan.

Projects seeking endorsement through HIWeather may either be funded or in the process of seeking funding.

For more information and Endorsement form : HIWeather Endorsement

Facebook users

Twitter users

We would like to invite those who use Twitter to communicate about HIWeather relevant topics to use the hashtag #hiweather. 

Follow and interact with our official account @WMO_HIWeather.

WeChat users

HIWeather

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Tel: +010 6840 6768

Email Address:hiwico@cma.gov.cn

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PROCESSES & PREDICTABILITY

AEOLUS CAMPAIGN WILL TAKE PLACE IN SEPTEMBER 2021

After two postponements, the Aeolus Tropical Campaign will finally take place inSeptember 2021 on the Cape Verde Islands, off the coast of West Africa. The German (German Aerospace Center, DLR) and French (Service des Avions Français Instrumentés pour la Recherche en Environnement, SAFIRE) Falcon aircraft will fly out of Sal airport, while the US American DC-8 (National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA) will be stationed on the US Virgin Islands and visit Cape Verde for intensive measurement periods. The research flights will be accompanied by radiosonde launches operated by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and by ground-based dust remote sensing measurements from the island of Mindelo (ASKOS: https://askos.space.noa.gr). In addition to Cal/Val activities for the space-borne wind and aerosol lidar on the Aeolus satellite, scientific investigations will target African Easterly and other Equatorial Waves, tropical cyclogenesis, dust outbreaks from the Sahara and mesoscale convective systems.


Preparing equipment for an Aeolus overpass in Mindelo

After two postponements, the Aeolus Tropical Campaign will finally take place inSeptember 2021 on the Cape Verde Islands, off the coast of West Africa. The German (German Aerospace Center, DLR) and French (Service des Avions Français Instrumentés pour la Recherche en Environnement, SAFIRE) Falcon aircraft will fly out of Sal airport, while the US American DC-8 (National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA) will be stationed on the US Virgin Islands and visit Cape Verde for intensive measurement periods. The research flights will be accompanied by radiosonde launches operated by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and by ground-based dust remote sensing measurements from the island of Mindelo (ASKOS: https://askos.space.noa.gr). In addition to Cal/Val activities for the space-borne wind and aerosol lidar on the Aeolus satellite, scientific investigations will target African Easterly and other Equatorial Waves, tropical cyclogenesis, dust outbreaks from the Sahara and mesoscale convective systems.

After two postponements, the Aeolus Tropical Campaign will finally take place inSeptember 2021 on the Cape Verde Islands, off the coast of West Africa. The German (German Aerospace Center, DLR) and French (Service des Avions Français Instrumentés pour la Recherche en Environnement, SAFIRE) Falcon aircraft will fly out of Sal airport, while the US American DC-8 (National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA) will be stationed on the US Virgin Islands and visit Cape Verde for intensive measurement periods. The research flights will be accompanied by radiosonde launches operated by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and by ground-based dust remote sensing measurements from the island of Mindelo (ASKOS: https://askos.space.noa.gr). In addition to Cal/Val activities for the space-borne wind and aerosol lidar on the Aeolus satellite, scientific investigations will target African Easterly and other Equatorial Waves, tropical cyclogenesis, dust outbreaks from the Sahara and mesoscale convective systems.

After two postponements, the Aeolus Tropical Campaign will finally take place inSeptember 2021 on the Cape Verde Islands, off the coast of West Africa. The German (German Aerospace Center, DLR) and French (Service des Avions Français Instrumentés pour la Recherche en Environnement, SAFIRE) Falcon aircraft will fly out of Sal airport, while the US American DC-8 (National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA) will be stationed on the US Virgin Islands and visit Cape Verde for intensive measurement periods. The research flights will be accompanied by radiosonde launches operated by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and by ground-based dust remote sensing measurements from the island of Mindelo (ASKOS: https://askos.space.noa.gr). In addition to Cal/Val activities for the space-borne wind and aerosol lidar on the Aeolus satellite, scientific investigations will target African Easterly and other Equatorial Waves, tropical cyclogenesis, dust outbreaks from the Sahara and mesoscale convective systems.

After two postponements, the Aeolus Tropical Campaign will finally take place inSeptember 2021 on the Cape Verde Islands, off the coast of West Africa. The German (German Aerospace Center, DLR) and French (Service des Avions Français Instrumentés pour la Recherche en Environnement, SAFIRE) Falcon aircraft will fly out of Sal airport, while the US American DC-8 (National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA) will be stationed on the US Virgin Islands and visit Cape Verde for intensive measurement periods. The research flights will be accompanied by radiosonde launches operated by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and by ground-based dust remote sensing measurements from the island of Mindelo (ASKOS: https://askos.space.noa.gr). In addition to Cal/Val activities for the space-borne wind and aerosol lidar on the Aeolus satellite, scientific investigations will target African Easterly and other Equatorial Waves, tropical cyclogenesis, dust outbreaks from the Sahara and mesoscale convective systems.