From karin.jonsell at su.se Mon Sep 1 11:55:46 2014 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Mon, 1 Sep 2014 11:55:46 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre: Smoluchowski Award to Ilona Riipinen! References: Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, We congratulate Bolin Centre RA2 leader Ilona Riipnen to the Smoluchowski Award in aerosol science! For further information, please see the attached press release from ITM. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Scientific Coordinator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius v?g 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. Begin forwarded message: > From: Stella Papadopoulou > Subject: av intresse? > Date: 1 september 2014 10:17:39 CEST > To: Karin Jonsell > > Hej Karin, > > Ilona fick pris ig?r i Korea. Jag har skrivit notis om detta (bif). > > Stella > -- > Stella Papadopoulou, Ph.D > Science Communicator > Department of Applied Environmental Science > Stockholm University > Svante Arrhenius v?g 8 > SE-114 18 Stockholm > Sweden > > www.itm.su.se > > Tel: +46 (0) 8 674 7011 > Mob:+46 (0)70 180 8234 > > Like us on Facebook! > http://www.facebook.com/itm.su.se > > Watch our films on Youtube! > http://youtube.com/channel/UC5R3TTh1Y4xvwxttDEzfHSw > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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URL: From leonard.barrie at geo.su.se Wed Sep 3 15:29:42 2014 From: leonard.barrie at geo.su.se (Leonard Barrie) Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2014 15:29:42 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] RA5 workshop on 20-22 October In-Reply-To: <6C801F23-A3EB-4CA3-BDAA-C47999274508@natgeo.su.se> References: <6C801F23-A3EB-4CA3-BDAA-C47999274508@natgeo.su.se> Message-ID: Dear Qiong Can you send details of the place etc to all including Karin and Ines so it can be on our website Leonard Barrie Research Director, Bolin Centre for Climate Research Professor for Climate and Atmospheric Science Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University 106 91 Stockholm Sweden leonard.barrie at geo.su.se mobile +46761418800 work IGV +46 8164868 On Tue, Jun 17, 2014 at 11:02 AM, Qiong Zhang wrote: > Dear Bolin Centre colleagues, > > RA5 is organising a workshop on "Stable water isotopes and climate", at > Stockholm University on 20-22 October. The main focus of the workshop is > stable water isotope measurements both from paleo-proxy archives (ice-core, > speleothem, lake sediment, etc) and from modern satellite data (Odin/SMR, > Envisat/MIPAS etc), as well as stable water isotope modeling. Several > experts will be invited to communicate their recent research with Bolin > centre scientists. The workshop aims to establish collaboration between > different communities with common interests in stable water isotopes and > climate. > > You are all welcome and please mark your calendar for this event! The > detailed programme will be announced after summer. > > Wish you all have a nice summer! > > Qiong Zhang, Francesco Pausta and Rienk Smittenberg > > _______________________________________________ > Bolincentret-at-su.se mailing list > Bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se > https://lists.su.se/mailman/listinfo/bolincentret-at-su.se > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Ilona.Riipinen at itm.su.se Tue Sep 9 19:25:28 2014 From: Ilona.Riipinen at itm.su.se (Ilona Riipinen) Date: Tue, 9 Sep 2014 17:25:28 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] FW: [REMINDER work shop Registration]:] Integrating COMSOL Multiphysics into teaching at Bolin Centre In-Reply-To: <5f9902be69f64316ac1b6fc014255a52@ITMS04.ad.itm.su.se> References: <5f9902be69f64316ac1b6fc014255a52@ITMS04.ad.itm.su.se> Message-ID: <68334d4fcaaf498abbc0f499ffcd77bb@ITMS04.ad.itm.su.se> From: Sebastian Arnoldt Sent: 09 September 2014 17:23 To: Itmall; bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se Cc: per at comsol.se Subject: [REMINDER work shop Registration]:] Integrating COMSOL Multiphysics into teaching at Bolin Centre Dear all, Please remember to sign up for the COMSOL Multiphysics work shop for teaching at the Bolin Centre. You can sign up here: http://www.comsol.se/events/preview/32033/ Best Regards, Sebastian Arnoldt / Research Assistant sebastian.arnoldt at itm.su.se / +46 8 674 7754 Stockholm University Department of Applied Environmental Science (itm) Room: 220X a From: Sebastian Arnoldt Sent: Tuesday, August 19, 2014 1:30 PM To: Itmall; bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se Subject: [Workshop Registration]:] Integrating COMSOL Multiphysics into teaching at Bolin Centre Dear all, I hope you have had a great summer! The Bolin Centre COMSOL Multiphysics workshop will be held on September 24, 9:00 - 12:00 on the premises of ITM, Stockholm University. To participate in the workshop, please register here: http://www.comsol.se/events/preview/32033/ Best Regards, Sebastian Arnoldt / Research Assistant sebastian.arnoldt at itm.su.se / +46 8 674 7754 Stockholm University Department of Applied Environmental Science (itm) Room: 220X a From: Sebastian Arnoldt Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2014 10:18 AM To: Itmall; bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se Subject: [Workshop date: September 24, 2014] Integrating COMSOL Multiphysics into teaching at Bolin Centre Dear all, Thank you for your participation in the doodle poll. Based on your input, we decided to have the workshop on September 24, 9:00 - 12:00. If you haven't participated in the poll, yet, but would like to participate in the workshop, please contact me directly. Further details will follow in the beginning of August. Best Regards, Sebastian Arnoldt / Research Assistant seabstian.arnoldt at itm.su.se / +46 8 674 7754 Stockholm University Department of Applied Environmental Science (itm) Room: 220X a From: Sebastian Arnoldt Sent: Monday, June 16, 2014 12:27 PM To: bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se; Itmall Subject: Reminder: [Invitation to workshop:] Integrating COMSOL Multiphysics into teaching at Bolin Centre Dear all, This is a reminder to participate in the doodle poll for the COMSOL Multiphysics for teaching workshop to be held in September. If you are interested in participating, please give your vote for a suitable timeslot through following the link in the e-mail below. Please contact me, if you have any further questions. Best Regards, Sebastian Arnoldt / Research Assistant seabstian.arnoldt at itm.su.se / +46 8 674 7754 Stockholm University Department of Applied Environmental Science (itm) Room: 220X a Dear all, Invitation to work-shop: I would like to invite you to a half-day COMSOL workshop for teaching staff at the Bolin Centre. The details of the workshop are laid out below. The location is itm/MISU (to be decided). The time is September (to be decided). If you would like to participate in the workshop, please vote in the doodle below, indicating a time that would suit you: http://doodle.com/gwvv56itgztukbr2 Target audience: Teaching staff with an affiliation to the Bolin Center for Climate Research. Please feel free to extend this invitation to anyone in the target audience. The goals of this work-shop are: 1. Demonstrate how COMSOL can be used for solving problems related to research and teaching at the Bolin Centre. 2. Identify and form a work group in order to pinpoint how COMSOL can be integrated in existing teaching curricula at the Bolin Centre. Background: Teaching undergraduate and graduate students, instructors face the challenge of exposing students to the complex mathematical framework that governs transport processes in the atmosphere and finding suitable classroom case studies that apply this framework to problems at the scientific frontier. Being introduced to this framework, a student might wonder how he or she could apply this immediately to concrete scientific questions. An example of such a question is: how would a population of pollutants, such as car exhausts, entering an office room through one or more windows disperse inside the entire office, i.e. the room itself, adjacent rooms and corridors. COMSOL Multiphysics is a software that allows students and instructors alike to investigate such problems with relative ease, since it eliminates the tedious procedure of implementing the underlying numerical schemes by hand. It is equation-based and allows users to view and fully modify the underlying equations. For students the possibility of viewing the equations results in a better understanding of the underlying problem and the physics involved. More information about COMSOL Multiphysics is available on www.comsol.com. Acknowledgements: This workshop is financed by the Bert Bolin Center of Climate Research, Research Area 2 Best Regards, Sebastian Arnoldt (sebastian.arnoldt at itm.su.se) Research Assistant itm / Stockholm University -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From leonard.barrie at geo.su.se Wed Sep 10 14:46:25 2014 From: leonard.barrie at geo.su.se (Leonard Barrie) Date: Wed, 10 Sep 2014 14:46:25 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Fwd: Invitation: ECRA Workshop of the Collaborative Programme "Hydrological Cycles" 30-31 October 2014, Rome In-Reply-To: <540F1B4D.1040307@ecra-climate.eu> References: <540F1B4D.1040307@ecra-climate.eu> Message-ID: Dear All For your information. If anyone plans to attend please contact me or any of the Research Area coordinators (http://www.bolin.su.se/index.php/research ) of the Bolin Centre. The possibility of some funding to attend exists if the relevance to your research and that of the Bolin Centre is strong. Regards Leonard Barrie Research Director, Bolin Centre for Climate Research Professor for Climate and Atmospheric Science Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University 106 91 Stockholm Sweden leonard.barrie at geo.su.se mobile +46761418800 work IGV +46 8164868 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Tina Swierczynski Date: Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 5:22 PM Subject: Invitation: ECRA Workshop of the Collaborative Programme "Hydrological Cycles" 30-31 October 2014, Rome To: Dear ECRA members, dear all, We are pleased to announce the *2nd **Workshop of the ECRA - Collaborative Programme 'Changes in the Hydrological Cycle' 30-31 October, in Rome* (CNR Headquarters, Piazzale Aldo Moro, 7 - 00815 Rome, Italy). The Workshop will be organized by Antonello Provenzale (ISAC-CNR) and Ralf Ludwig (LMU). Please find attached the agenda and the registration details. For further information please drop me an email. Kind regards, Tina Swierczynski -- * Dr. Tina Swierczynski * Executive Secretary European Climate Research Alliance Rue du Tr?ne 98 1050 Brussels Belgium Phone: +32 2 5000 983 Fax: +32 2 5000 980 Email: tina.swierczynski at ecra-climate.eu *http://www.ecra-climate.eu http://www.helmholtz.de http://www.awi.de * -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 2nd ECRA-HP-Workshop Announcement - 30-31 October 2104 - Rome(1).pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 2054784 bytes Desc: not available URL: From agatha.deboer at geo.su.se Wed Sep 10 21:07:03 2014 From: agatha.deboer at geo.su.se (Agatha de Boer) Date: Wed, 10 Sep 2014 21:07:03 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] 18 Sep Seminar Joellen Russel: Southern Ocean and CO2 Message-ID: <5410A157.7030408@geo.su.se> Hi all, Joellen Russell from the Univeristy of Arizona is visiting 17-19 September. She will give a talk on the 18th: Title: *The role of the ocean in climate: heat and carbon uptake by the Southern Ocean.* Date: *18 Sep at 15:30* Venue: *Misu, Room C609*, Arrhenius Laboratory, 6th floor If you would like to chat with her before or after the seminar please let me know. She would like meet and discuss research with as many of you as possible during her visit. Her website is: http://www.geo.arizona.edu/~jrussell/ Best, Agatha -- Agatha M. de Boer, Associate Professor Dept. of Geological Science and Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University, 106 91 Stockholm, Tel: +46 8 16 4730 http://people.su.se/~adebo -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Thu Sep 11 13:24:17 2014 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Thu, 11 Sep 2014 13:24:17 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre: (A very good) Science Communications Course at Stockholm University Message-ID: <0142D915-3B7E-4935-822D-8D2D454EB974@su.se> Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [But regrettably only the Stockholm University part] The Communications department at Stockholm University is organizing a course in science communication. Here are some arguments of going: I have been informed of the course and the set up, content and speakers seem very good indeed. The course is divided into 6 parts of ??1 days sub-courses spread over the autumn term The sub-courses can be takten separately, but they recommend you to start with the first introductory day The course covers many different parts of how to communicate See the program here: http://www.su.se/medarbetare/personal/kompetens-ledarutveckling/kommunikations-utbildningar/f?r-forskare An amount of ?theory? is included, but also much practice If you can?t make it this term, the course will run in the spring as well The cost of the course is 800-2000 per sub-course. This is a real bargin as the real cost is around 30 000 SEK each. The University has a goal that ?everyone should do outreach? The best part: The Bolin Centre will sponsor 3 scientists taking the course (or some parts of it) They are decided on a ?first-to-reply-to-this-email-basis. Some minor drawbacks: The course is in Swedish only There can only 18 attending persons per sub-course The course is intended to senior scientists, and they will be prioritized above any applying PhD students How to enroll: http://www.su.se/medarbetare/personal/kompetens-ledarutveckling/kommunikations-utbildningar/f?r-forskare Please go the sub-course web page See the link under "anm?lan? Please send me a note that you are going as well! Last day of registration: 20 September 2014 Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Scientific Coordinator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius v?g 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Thu Sep 11 15:17:11 2014 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Thu, 11 Sep 2014 15:17:11 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre [FYI]: Advanced PhD Course in Climate Time Series Analysis, Heckenbeck, Germany, 20 to 24 October 2014 References: <47CC43E3-39BA-4B7C-88A3-D5D61A5FE351@natgeo.su.se> Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [FYI email] Please see the advertisement for the interesting PhD course in Climate Time Series Analysis below. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Scientific Coordinator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius v?g 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. >> Fr?n: Mudelsee M >> Datum: 10 september 2014 08:02:12 CEST >> Till: Verborgene_Empfaenger:; >> ?mne: Advanced PhD Course in Climate Time Series Analysis, Heckenbeck, Germany, 20 to 24 October 2014 >> >> Dear colleague, >> >> Climate Risk Analysis - Manfred Mudelsee is giving an >> >> Advanced PhD Course in Climate Time Series Analysis, Heckenbeck, Germany, 20 to 24 October 2014 >> >> The course is tailored to the needs of PhD students in climatology, meteorology or hydrology. It consists of lectures and extensive hands-on training in computer tutorials. Data, software and a hardcopy of the textbook (Mudelsee, 2014, Climate Time Series Analysis, Springer, 454 pp) is included in the fee. >> >> Of special interest: One year post-course support on software and statistical advice (e.g., PhD thesis) is given. Lunch, snacks, coffee and tea are also covered. >> >> Participants of past courses have praised the intellectual atmosphere, the family-like setting and nice rural landscape here at Heckenbeck. >> >> Students are encouraged to bring their own data for discussion and analysis during the course. The number of participants is limited to six (first come, first serve) to allow in-depth consultation with the course holder, Manfred Mudelsee. >> >> Participation fee: 1750 EUR plus VAT >> >> Registration deadline: 5 October 2014 >> >> Registration and more information: http://www.climate-risk-analysis.com/courses/time-series/heckenbeck-october-2014.html >> >> Please forward this message to your students or researchers who may be interested. >> >> Thank you very much! >> >> Best wishes >> >> Manfred Mudelsee >> >> === >> >> Sorry in case you receive this several times >> >> === >> >> Dr. Manfred Mudelsee >> >> Chief Executive Officer >> Climate Risk Analysis - Manfred Mudelsee e. K. (HRA 20 13 94) >> Kreuzstrasse 27 >> Heckenbeck >> 37581 Bad Gandersheim >> Germany >> >> Telephone: +49 5563 999246 >> Email: mudelsee at climate-risk-analysis.com >> URL: http://www.climate-risk-analysis.com >> Skype: mudelsee1 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Fri Sep 12 09:47:10 2014 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 09:47:10 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre [FYI]: Docent lecture 6 October by Nina Kirchner References: <2D662471075CFC4194C38C4D24115FB74AB2F783@ebox-prod-srv03.win.su.se> Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [For Your Information email] Nina Kirchner will give her Docent lecture the 6 October. For further information, please see below. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Scientific Coordinator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius v?g 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. > Welcome to docent lecture in glaciology > Nina Kirchner > > > > Marine ice sheet instability > > Monday 6th October, 13.15 > Ahlmannsalen-lecture room, Geo-science building > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Fri Sep 12 10:31:45 2014 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 10:31:45 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre [FYI]: New MOOC course on sustainability References: Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [For Your Information email] Please see below for information about a new course on sustainability. The SDSN considers the course on a MSc level. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Scientific Coordinator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius v?g 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. > Hi All! > > I wanted to alert you to a new MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) under the auspices of the UN's Sustainable Development Solutions Network called: "Planetary boundaries and human opportunities." It's now open for enrolment. I helped out with a short bit on ocean acidification and ocean resources, but the course is much broader, focusing on global environmental change and resilience. > > Here is the link in case you are interested or want to spread in your own networks (especially to students!). A short course description is: > > ?Planetary boundaries and human opportunities? gives students an overview of a range of emerging concepts within sustainability science, like the Anthropocene, planetary boundaries, and resilience. These concepts are at the core of contemporary research and debate on global sustainability. They are key to frame and understand rapidly changing trends in global environmental change caused by humans, and to assess responses that aim at reversing global environmental change. They also help exploring pathways for ensuring safe and just human wellbeing for present and future generations. > > A thriving global society, now and in the future, depends on the stable functioning of the Earth System and its resilience ? including the atmosphere, oceans, forests, waterways, biodiversity and biogeochemical cycles. Unfortunately, scientific evidence indicates that human influence has altered Earth System processes to a point that we have begun transgressing planetary boundaries that have kept civilization safe for the past 10,000 years. Humans are now the most significant driver of global change, potentially propelling the planet into a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene. In this new situation, unsustainable patterns of production, consumption, and population growth are challenging the resilience of the planet to support human activity. The fundamental question is how our societies can develop in a just and safe way within the planet?s boundaries. > > This course aims at expanding and updating participant?s ?conceptual toolbox? in matters of global sustainability. Upon successful completion, a participant will be able to demonstrate a clear understanding of key concepts on global environmental change and their theoretical underpinning, as well as an up-to-date understanding of current debates in the global sustainability arena and emerging examples of approaches and solutions currently being developed.? > > Cheers, > Kevin > > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: PastedGraphic-2.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 1125850 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From radek at itm.su.se Fri Sep 12 17:19:50 2014 From: radek at itm.su.se (Radovan Krejci) Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 17:19:50 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] BG-ATM seminar - 1 October 2014 13:00 Ahlmannsalen Message-ID: <54130F16.2060401@itm.su.se> -- ------------------------------------------------- Radovan KREJCI Department of Applied Environmental Science (ITM) Atmospheric Science Unit Stockholm University S 106 91 Stockholm Sweden Tel: +46 8 6747224 Fax: +46 8 6747325 Cell phone: +46 706 341511 E-mail: radek at itm.su.se www.itm.su.se ------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: djhhicic.png Type: image/png Size: 20178 bytes Desc: not available URL: From leonard.barrie at geo.su.se Fri Sep 12 17:48:06 2014 From: leonard.barrie at geo.su.se (Leonard Barrie) Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 17:48:06 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Fwd: Invitation: How to Write a Competitive Proposal for Horizon 2020 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear All I strongly recommend you take this course and look hard at Horizon 2020 funding. Leonard Barrie Research Director, Bolin Centre for Climate Research Professor for Climate and Atmospheric Science Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University 106 91 Stockholm Sweden leonard.barrie at geo.su.se mobile +46761418800 work IGV +46 8164868 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Avdelningen f?r forskningsservice Date: Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 4:52 PM Subject: Invitation: How to Write a Competitive Proposal for Horizon 2020 To: leonard.barrie at geo.su.se - *F?R DIG SOM ARBETAR MED FORSKNING VID STOCKHOLMS UNIVERSITET - * September 2014 Klicka h?r f?r att l?sa inbjudan i din webbl?sare >> Tipsa en v?n om Nyhetsbrevet! >> Invitation to seminar on writing proposals for the EU framework programme Horizon 2020 How to Write a Competitive Proposal for Horizon 2020 The Research Liaison Office (Avdelningen f?r forskningsservice) offers a two-day seminar primarily targeted at senior researchers who consider writing proposals for EU funding. The focus of the seminar is on multi-partner proposals of the type submitted for e.g. calls within Societal Challenges. Although ERC and Marie Curie actions will be addressed, they are not the main item on the agenda. Please note that sessions are not held on consecutive days. The session on Day 1 (Wednesday) will be spent on the relevance of Horizon 2020 to EU policies, how to collect information, the success factors for proposals and common problems in proposal writing. The session on Day 2 (Friday) will be more of a workshop where a few seminar participants will be given the opportunity to present a project idea, the "one-page-proposal", and get feedback from the seminar leader Se?n McCarthy as well as from and other participants. The Day 2 workshop is usually considered highly valuable by workshop participants, particularly when it comes to putting the presented project in a context of societal impact and stakeholder involvement. The seminar is held by Dr Se?n McCarthy, Hyperion Ltd. Dr McCarthy has presented training courses and seminars to over 32,000 researchers and research managers in over 270 research centers in 29 countries. His courses are based on almost 30 years of proposal writing, project management and project administration of EU R&D projects. This event is an in-house seminar - free of charge - for researchers at Stockholm University. Since the number of seats is limited, we expect that those who register will also attend. Day 1: Wednesday, September 24, 9:00 - 12:30 Day 2: Friday, September 26, 9:00 - 12:30 Registration deadline is Monday, September 22. For registration, follow this link: http://simplesignup.se/event/49983 >> L?s mer om Forskningsservice p? Medarbetarwebben . >> F?r att prenumerera p? nyhetsbrevet, skicka e-post till oss p? Forskningsservice . >> Klicka h?r f?r att avregistrera din adress >> For information about research funding in English, please visit the Research Liaison Office on the Stockholm University international website . >> Bes?ksadress/Visiting address: S?dra huset, hus F, plan 6/Bldg F, level 6. Postman -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Mon Sep 15 11:00:12 2014 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Mon, 15 Sep 2014 11:00:12 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre: Invitation to the Bolin Days 2014 Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Scientists and others interested, You are all very welcome to the Bolin Days 2014 The Bolin Centre for Climate Research warmly invites you to the annual Bolin Days with interesting scientific discussions and a friendly get together. The programme includes interesting talks by members of the Bolin Centre, seminars about the Navarino Environmental Observatory and the SWERUS expedition, discussions over fika, a poster competition with refreshments and give-aways and a nice relaxed dinner with a Ceilidh dance. We also recommend you to talk to the Bolin Centre Database team in room Y20 during the Bolin Days. They will demonstrate the newly improved database and provide hands-on support. Bolin Days 2014 Date: 19-20 November 2014 Place: Geoscience building, Stockholm University Program: See the attachment Information Please register at www.bolin.su.se/bolindays2014 no later than 10 November 2014 The research area leaders will organise the presentations within their research fields Please contact them for information You are welcome to bring a poster PhD students are particularly welcome and the author(s) of the best PhD poster will receive SEK 20 000 in research money There will be a Science Forum the day before the start of the Bolin Days and here the Bolin Centre External Science Advisory Group (ESAG) will present themselves and their science. Warmly welcome on 18 November, 13?16 in the De Geer room. If you have any questions, please contact me. Yours faithfully, Dr. Karin Jonsell Dr. Karin Jonsell Scientific Coordinator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius v?g 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: BolinCentre_BolinDays2014_Programme_v1.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 249265 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From leonard.barrie at geo.su.se Mon Sep 15 15:21:42 2014 From: leonard.barrie at geo.su.se (Leonard Barrie) Date: Mon, 15 Sep 2014 15:21:42 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Fwd: New scientist article on clouds and climate change... Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Thanks to Matt Salter of ITM for drawing our attention to this article which is quite good on the feedback role of clouds in climate. It is very good emphasizing the unknowns at all scales and the need for good systematic observations testing models and submodels of processes. Bjorn Stevens of the Max Planck Institue in Hamburg is well know for his championing an understanding of the role of cloud processes. Apologies to ITM folks who get this twice. Leonard Barrie Research Director, Bolin Centre for Climate Research Professor for Climate and Atmospheric Science Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University 106 91 Stockholm Sweden leonard.barrie at geo.su.se mobile +46761418800 work IGV +46 8164868 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Matthew Salter Date: Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 1:43 PM Subject: New scientist article on clouds and climate change... To: Itml *Hi all,* *A few of us are interested in clouds and might therefore be interested in the following pop science article on climate change and clouds which was published in last weeks edition of New Scientist magazine. It includes reference to a few interesting high-impact article published over the last few months and of course a mention or two of aerosols. I reproduce the article below for your convenience...* *Cheers, Matt * Burning blue sky: Earth's cloud shield is failing Video: *Cloud simulations mimic how they move through the sky* *It's the clouds that stop the oceans boiling. But as the planet warms, our main defence against the sun's fierce heat is weakening* AMONG the ranks of fluffy clouds stretching across the summer sky, one catches your eye. There is something familiar in the shape. Is it a dog? A bear on its hind legs? Not quite. As the pale billows shift, the cloud spreads out something like a pair of wings. Aha - a guardian angel. A little lopsided, but somehow reassuring. Until another change catches the air. The wings melt away and the cloud shrinks. Slowly it takes on a form that is less comforting. Starker. More... skeletal. As well as providing entertainment on a lazy day, cloud-watching has a more serious side. Clouds have a vital role that few people appreciate: their overall effect is as a global heat shield, reflecting sunlight that would otherwise bake the Earth and obliterate life. Much depends on what happens to this heat shield as the planet warms. It might grow a little stronger, slowing the warming somewhat. Or it could weaken, meaning the world will warm even faster. This is a crucial question because it could mean the difference between a planet that is 3 ?C hotter next century - very bad but probably survivable - or 6 ?C - which would be catastrophic. To narrow this range of uncertainty we need to understand clouds much better. *(Image: Getty)* In recent years, we have started to make progress. It is now clear, for instance, where climate scientists should be focusing their attention. "We are hot on the trail, in a way that we haven't been before," says Bjorn Stevens at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany. That trail leads to Earth's tropical seas, where great expanses of low cloud exert a powerful influence over the climate of the entire planet. Like all clouds, they trap heat below them in the form of long-wave infrared radiation. This is why temperatures fall less on cloudy nights than on clear ones. But clouds also reflect some sunlight straight back into space and, less obviously, act as radiators, emitting infrared to space from their tops. So a cloud is a parasol, blanket and cooling fin all at once *(see diagram)* . The overall result depends on the height and type of clouds. Low clouds cool the planet: although they trap some heat, they also reflect a lot, and their fairly warm cloud tops emit a lot of heat to space. High clouds emit much less from their colder cloud tops, and often reflect little too, so they help warm the planet. Low cloud is more widespread than high, which is why clouds cool the planet overall. In fact if you were to strip away all clouds, it might lead to a runaway greenhouse effect that would eventually boil away the oceans, *according to calculations published in 2013* by Colin Goldblatt at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada. That's not going to happen, but we do need to know how clouds will change in a warmer world. The best way to find out, you might think, would be look at how clouds have changed over the past century as the planet warmed by 1 ?C. This turns out to be extremely tricky. If you have ever been mesmerised by writhing wisps of cloud, you will appreciate that they are rather hard to pin down. Every approach to cloud observation has some shortcomings. Weather stations on land are no use for the more widespread and important ocean clouds. Observations from ships are patchy and subjective. Instrument-laden planes are scarce. Weather satellites give some insights, but drift and decaying orbits plague their data. And the dedicated climate satellites of NASA's Earth Observing System have only been watching clouds for a decade or so, not long enough to catch long-term trends. Even if we did have a good global record of cloud behaviour, it might not be a reliable guide to what happens when the planet gets even warmer. As the temperature soars we might pass some threshold that produces big changes in cloud behaviour. If we understood exactly how clouds work, we could predict future behaviour in a climate model. But cloud computing isn't easy. The inner workings of a cloud involve turbulent flows of air on scales ranging from a few kilometres to a few metres. This is invisibly small to global climate models, which slice the atmosphere into cubes a hundred kilometres wide. Specialised small-scale models can now capture eddies down to a hundred metres or so, but these cannot encompass large weather systems. On even finer scales inside clouds, droplets of water and crystals of ice are colliding, coalescing, condensing and evaporating. Many of these processes - collectively known as "microphysics" - are well understood, but not all of them. Zoom in even more, and you see that *clouds cannot form without a fine mist of aerosols* : airborne particles less than a micrometre across that act as nuclei around which water can condense or freeze. With more particles you may get a whiter, longer-lived cloud, making a better parasol. Models cannot capture all of these processes, so they have to rely on approximations, such as the observed relationship between cloudiness and humidity, say, or temperature. These relationships can then be plugged in to the models. But as we have seen, observations are not perfect, so we have no universal relationship between all the properties of the atmosphere and the amount and type of cloud that you should get. That gives modellers too many options. For example, cloud cover correlates well with the temperature difference between ground level and 3 kilometres up. But it correlates equally well with another measure that includes both temperature and humidity. Model results vary depending which option is chosen. "They give completely different predictions for what happens when Earth warms up," says Steven Sherwood at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. Despite these difficulties, there has been progress with some types of cloud. Models and observations agree that high clouds will, on average, be pushed higher still as temperatures rise. That makes their cloud tops even colder, so they become less effective at radiating heat. Meanwhile, storm tracks will probably shift towards the poles, where clouds reflect less solar heat. Both of these factors will act to amplify warming. A much more important part of the global heat shield is found in the tropics and subtropics, where great blankets of low stratocumulus cloud stretch over much of the oceans on most days. Here the models clash. Some predict almost no change in these low clouds, others a sharp decline that amplifies global warming. To work out which point to the real future, we need a better understanding of what might be going on above those warm tropical waters. "In general I find physical mechanisms to be more compelling than 'my model predicts X so it must be true'," says Peter Caldwell at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. The past few years have seen a flurry of new mechanisms explored. Some look like good news: they are "negative feedbacks" that act to slow warming, the warmer things get. For example, where warm, dry air descends towards tropical oceans as part of a global circulation pattern it can trap sheets of low, cooling stratocumulus cloud. With warm air above and cooler air below - a temperature inversion - the air cannot rise and lose its moisture by raining. And as global temperatures rise, the warm downdrafts should get warmer, strengthening the inversion effect and increasing cloud cover on average. Trapping more heat At least, that is what observations and small-scale models suggest, Caldwell and his colleagues *reported last year* . But it is only one mechanism. "I think this negative feedback will be offset by a variety of positive feedbacks," says Caldwell. "I'm on the fence about whether stratocumulus will increase or decrease, though most of my colleagues seem to think it will decrease." That is because they have realised several positive feedbacks could be at work. For one thing, the clouds could be starved of moisture. Low clouds get their moisture by a roundabout process: as heat radiates from the cloud tops, cold parcels of air form and sink down. This pushes up damp air from near the sea surface, which forms more cloud as it cools and condenses. In 2009, *two teams that included Caldwell and Stevens* pointed out that rising greenhouse gas levels will trap more heat, reducing heat loss from the cloud tops. That means less cooling, less sinking air, less moisture dragged up and less cloud cover on average. Or clouds could lose moisture to the dry air above. Even where a temperature inversion traps the clouds, there is some mixing between damp, cool air below and dry, warm air above. As Stevens and colleagues suggested in 2012, warming could drive stronger updrafts from below and increase this mixing, dissipating the vital water. The result would be reduced cloud cover and amplified warming. Even if mixing doesn't get stronger, there could still be more moisture loss to the dry air above. Warmer air can hold much more water vapour, so in a warmer world a given air current will carry more moisture away. To find out how big this feedback could be, Sherwood's team recently looked at data from weather balloons to see how much mixing there is today (*Nature, vol 505, p 37* ). It turned out to be pretty vigorous - more than in many models. "Models that have more mixing are closer to the truth," says Sherwood. Different models suggest that a doubling of CO2 could lead to warming of anywhere between 1.5 ?C and 4.5 ?C in the short term - a figure known as climate sensitivity. But the models with realistic mixing are the ones with greater sensitivity, Sherwood found. If they are to be trusted, then Earth's short-term sensitivity will be 3 ?C to 4.5 ?C. "This work is a great step in the right direction, but I don't think it is definitive," says John Fasullo at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. One problem with Sherwood's approach, he says, is that observations of mixing are limited - relying on a scattering of weather balloons - so it may be difficult to confirm the theory. Fasullo prefers to compare cloudiness directly with humidity, which can be measured globally by satellites. In 2012 he showed that models often overestimate the humidity in the subtropics. His finding was also bad news: the models with more realistic low humidity tended to predict greater warming (*Science, vol 338, p 792* ). These findings are casting some light on the great cloud conundrum, but it is still rather a dingy grey light, just hinting at which models might be most trustworthy. "Are the more 'successful' models getting the right answer for the right reasons?" asks Fasullo. As computer power grows we can build models with finer resolution, but we won't reach some paradise of perfect modelling. Even ignoring the microphysics, important air movements are happening on scales as small as 5 or 10 metres. It will be several decades at least before global models can include such fine detail. So models must keep using approximations for this small-scale stuff, making it all the more important to test them against direct observations. Feeding clouds One answer may be to make the best of weather satellites. "For climate you need a stable observing network, but the weathersats that show clouds on the evening news were never intended to be stable in that way - if a sensor degrades or the orbit drifts a bit you can still see where a hurricane is," says Joel Norris at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, California. With a thin cloud layer, whether you see it all depends on the angle you look at it, so as satellites spiral closer to Earth, their record of cloudiness can be distorted. They can also move geographically so they are seeing a given spot later in the day when there is typically more or less cloud. To some extent these distortions can be corrected, and Norris is now working to do that with two of the main weathersat databases. We need to watch not only the visible clouds, but also their invisible vaporous foodstuff. "Water vapour is the single most important variable," says Stevens. "If you ask how good are our global measurements - well, it's a crime, we are off by tens of per cent. But the great thing is we have some instruments now that can measure water vapour accurately." Raman lidars can fire a laser into the air and measure the spectrum of light scattered back by water molecules. "We need more of those - and also in space," says Stevens. So we haven't mastered the science of clouds yet. But both observations and models suggest that far from coming to our rescue, clouds are going to suffer along with us. And many independent lines of evidence point to the same conclusion. Looking at past climates, for instance, cannot tell us how clouds behaved but does reveal strong warming in response to rising greenhouse gas levels. A *slew of studies published this year* all conclude that the climate's sensitivity to CO2 is at the higher end of the range. The forecast, then, is disturbingly clear and uncloudy. *This article appeared in print under the headline "Clearing skies"* *Stephen Battersby** is a freelance writer based in London* *[image: Issue 2985 of New Scientist magazine]* If you would like *to reuse any content* from New Scientist, either in print or online, please *contact the syndication * department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a *variety of licensing options* available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to. Evernote helps you remember everything and get organized effortlessly. *Download Evernote* . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 3cbcb9d2cc64253afb43664169be7af8.jpeg Type: image/jpeg Size: 30322 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 66d2926f8447731647686c9c732a47c4.jpeg Type: image/jpeg Size: 97328 bytes Desc: not available URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Mon Sep 22 13:17:44 2014 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2014 13:17:44 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre [FYI]: GBP - Three Decades in Sweden, 20 October 2014 References: Message-ID: <32F3F1D8-4D7B-48D6-ACCC-FD66A6446FA8@su.se> Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [For your information email] International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP) is celebrating 30 years in Sweden and you are all invited. Please see below. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Scientific Coordinator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius v?g 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. > -------------------- > Dear friends and colleagues, > > The success and achievements of IGBP has been made possible by the tremendous effort and commitment of scientists, funders, staff and the Swedish government for almost three decades. > > It is our pleasure to invite you to a special event ?IGBP ? Three decades in Sweden? on 20th October 2014 to celebrate IGBP?s achievements and Sweden?s contribution. > > As places are limited, we urge you to RSVP your attendance as soon as possible by emailing the IGBP admin team admin at igbp.kva.se. The deadline for registration is Friday 3rd October 2013. > > Please see the attached document for more information on the evening?s programme. Light refreshments will be provided. > > We look forward to your attendance, > > With kind regards, > > > -------------- > Sybil P. Seitzinger | Executive Director > International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP) > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: IGBP - three decades in Sweden invitation[3].pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 143611 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hakan.grudd at natgeo.su.se Tue Sep 23 19:31:07 2014 From: hakan.grudd at natgeo.su.se (=?Windows-1252?Q?H=E5kan_Grudd?=) Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2014 17:31:07 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Open Research Data Pilot In-Reply-To: <3AE363DFBA7F494ABAF714804FFE7633518F3BD8@ebox-prod-srv05.win.su.se> References: <3AE363DFBA7F494ABAF714804FFE7633518F3BD8@ebox-prod-srv05.win.su.se> Message-ID: <3AE363DFBA7F494ABAF714804FFE7633518F3C02@ebox-prod-srv05.win.su.se> Dear Bolin Centre scientists, this will be of interest if you are looking at Horizon 2020 funding: A novelty in Horizon 2020 is the Open Research Data Pilot which aims to improve and maximise access to and re-use of research data generated by projects. Participating projects will make their research data available on a voluntary basis, as specified in their Data Management Plans (see below). Participating projects will receive dedicated support. In particular, any costs relating to the implementation of the pilot will be reimbursed and specific technical and professional support services will be provided. Areas of the 2014-2015 Work Programme participating in the Open Research Data Pilot are: - Future and Emerging Technologies - Research infrastructures ? part e-Infrastructures - Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies ? Information and Communication Technologies - Societal Challenge: Secure, Clean and Efficient Energy ? part Smart cities and communities - Societal Challenge: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw materials - Societal Challenge: Europe in a changing world ? inclusive, innovative and reflective Societies - Science with and for Society13 Projects have the possibility to opt out of the pilot. Individual actions funded under other areas of the Work Programme can participate in the Pilot on a voluntary basis. A further new element in Horizon 2020 is the use of Data Management Plans detailing what data the project will generate, whether and how it will be exploited or made accessible for verification and re-use, and how it will be curated and preserved. The use of a Data Management Plan is required for projects participating in the Open Research Data Pilot. Other projects are invited to submit a Data Management Plan if relevant for their planned research. _____________________________________ I will be happy to discuss how the Bolin Centre Database can be of help. Don't hesitate to contact me! Maybe I will also meet some of you tomorrow and on Friday at the seminar on "How to Write a Competitative Proposal for Horizon 2020". Cheers, H?kan Grudd Database coordinator for the Bolin Centre -------------- next part -------------- En HTML-bilaga skiljdes ut... URL: From barbara.wohlfarth at geo.su.se Fri Sep 26 15:48:46 2014 From: barbara.wohlfarth at geo.su.se (Barbara Wohlfarth) Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2014 15:48:46 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Upcoming (paleoclimate) events at IGV Message-ID: <54256EBE.2060902@geo.su.se> Dear all, I would like to draw your attention to the following upcoming "paleoclimate events": 10 October, 1 pm, DeGeersalen, Geohuset PhD defense Akkaneewut Chabangborn* Asian monsoon over mainland Southeast Asia during the past 25 000 years* Faculty opponent: Professor Karen Kohfeld, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver 17 October, 1 pm, DeGeersalen, Geohuset PhD defense Sakonvan Chawchai *Paleonvironmental and paleoclimatic changes**in northeast Thailand during the Holocene* Faculty opponent: Professor Rich Bindler, Ume? University 25 November 2 pm Geohuset Br?gger lecture by *Professor Pascale Braconnot*, Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement, Universit? de Versailles. Pascale is widely known for her paleo climate modelling work. She also was one of the lead authors for Chapter 9 in Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis. Best wishes Barbara -- *Barbara Wohlfarth* Professor Department of Geological Sciences, Stockholm University, SE-10691 Stockholm -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /Phone:/+46 (0)8 164883/Mobile:/ +46 (0)706 977618 /Skype:/barbara.wohlfarth/Webb:///http://people.geo.su.se/barbara /Blog:/http://barbarawohlfarth.wordpress.com/Youtube//:/ http://www.youtube.com/user/GeologicalSciences /Kiva loans that change lives: //www.kiva.org/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From leonard.barrie at geo.su.se Fri Sep 26 16:03:39 2014 From: leonard.barrie at geo.su.se (Leonard Barrie) Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2014 16:03:39 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Fwd: JPI Climate Guidelines on Access to Knowledge: Consultation process, ECRA contribution Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre members Note the background description of the European Joint Programming Initiative for Climate ( JPI Climate) given by Tina S. of the European Climate Research Alliance Office in Brussels. This is in a request for feedback on the JPI Guidelines for Access to Knowledge" Our data base activities certainly are relevant "Access to Knowledge" If anyone has comments please send them to Tina on behalf of the Bolin Centre and copy me. Perhaps one of you will find this rather non-scientific aspect of our research interesting in a way I have not imagined. Regards Leonard Barrie Research Director, Bolin Centre for Climate Research Professor for Climate and Atmospheric Science Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University 106 91 Stockholm Sweden leonard.barrie at geo.su.se mobile +46761418800 work IGV +46 8164868 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Tina Swierczynski Date: Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 2:57 PM Subject: JPI Climate Guidelines on Access to Knowledge: Consultation process, ECRA contribution To: Dear ECRA members, ECRA was asked from JPI Climate to give a feedback on the attached document "Guidelines on Access to knowledge". If you have comments, suggestions etc., please send it to me until *10th October 2014!* Many thanks. Background information: JPI Climate is a collaboration between 14 European countries working on several topics, e.g. Climate Services (http://www.jpi-climate.eu) and with intention to fund new transnational research initiatives. As it was announced during the last JPI Climate - Governing Board (GB) meeting in Paris, JPI Climate is taking concrete action on Access to Knowledge/Open Access/Open Data. Apart from the organisation of the workshop on Access to Climate Knowledge and Climate Services JPI Climate, a set of Guidelines on Access to Knowledge has been developed. After having submitted the previous draft to a consultation process with representatives from the JPI Climate internal bodies as well as selected external experts, now a Guidelines' final version draft is ready. Now, JPI Climate would like to know the opinion from the whole (GB), including members and partner institutions. Kind regards, Tina -- * Dr. Tina Swierczynski * Executive Secretary European Climate Research Alliance Rue du Tr?ne 98 1050 Brussels Belgium Phone: +32 2 5000 983 Fax: +32 2 5000 980 Email: tina.swierczynski at ecra-climate.eu *http://www.ecra-climate.eu http://www.helmholtz.de http://www.awi.de * -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: JPI Climate Guidelines on Access to Knowledge_v1.0_20140811.odt Type: application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.text Size: 653001 bytes Desc: not available URL: From radek at itm.su.se Tue Sep 30 09:29:33 2014 From: radek at itm.su.se (Radovan Krejci) Date: Tue, 30 Sep 2014 09:29:33 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Fwd: BG-ATM seminar - 1 October 2014 13:00 Ahlmannsalen REMINDER In-Reply-To: <54130F16.2060401@itm.su.se> References: <54130F16.2060401@itm.su.se> Message-ID: <542A5BDD.40400@itm.su.se> -------- Original Message -------- Subject: BG-ATM seminar - 1 October 2014 13:00 Ahlmannsalen Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 17:19:50 +0200 From: Radovan Krejci Reply-To: radek at itm.su.se To: bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se -- ------------------------------------------------- Radovan KREJCI Department of Applied Environmental Science (ITM) Atmospheric Science Unit Stockholm University S 106 91 Stockholm Sweden Tel: +46 8 6747224 Fax: +46 8 6747325 Cell phone: +46 706 341511 E-mail:radek at itm.su.se www.itm.su.se ------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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