The international effort toward climate services, epitomised by the development of the Global Framework for Climate Services and, more recently the launch of Copernicus Climate Change Service has renewed interest in the users and the role they can play in shaping the services they will eventually use. Here we critically analyse the results of the five climate service prototypes that were developed as part of the EU funded project EUPORIAS. Starting from the experience acquired in each of the projects we attempt to distil a few key lessons which, we believe, will be relevant to the wider community of climate service developers.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Buontempo2017What
%A Buontempo, Carlo
%A Hanlon, Helen M.
%A Bruno Soares, Marta
%A Christel, Isadora
%A Soubeyroux, Jean-Michel
%A Viel, Christian
%A Calmanti, Sandro
%A Bosi, Lorenzo
%A Falloon, Pete
%A Palin, Erika J.
%A Vanvyve, Emilie
%A Torralba, Verónica
%A Gonzalez-Reviriego, Nube
%A Doblas-Reyes, Francisco
%A Pope, Edward C. D.
%A Newton, Paula
%A Liggins, Felicity
%D 2017
%J Climate Services
%K wind climateservices colleagues communication energy seasonal renewables hydrology agriculture forecasting euporias visualisation
%R 10.1016/j.cliser.2017.06.003
%T What have we learnt from EUPORIAS climate service prototypes?
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cliser.2017.06.003
%X The international effort toward climate services, epitomised by the development of the Global Framework for Climate Services and, more recently the launch of Copernicus Climate Change Service has renewed interest in the users and the role they can play in shaping the services they will eventually use. Here we critically analyse the results of the five climate service prototypes that were developed as part of the EU funded project EUPORIAS. Starting from the experience acquired in each of the projects we attempt to distil a few key lessons which, we believe, will be relevant to the wider community of climate service developers.
@article{Buontempo2017What,
abstract = {The international effort toward climate services, epitomised by the development of the Global Framework for Climate Services and, more recently the launch of Copernicus Climate Change Service has renewed interest in the users and the role they can play in shaping the services they will eventually use. Here we critically analyse the results of the five climate service prototypes that were developed as part of the EU funded project EUPORIAS. Starting from the experience acquired in each of the projects we attempt to distil a few key lessons which, we believe, will be relevant to the wider community of climate service developers.},
added-at = {2018-06-18T21:23:34.000+0200},
author = {Buontempo, Carlo and Hanlon, Helen M. and Bruno Soares, Marta and Christel, Isadora and Soubeyroux, Jean-Michel and Viel, Christian and Calmanti, Sandro and Bosi, Lorenzo and Falloon, Pete and Palin, Erika J. and Vanvyve, Emilie and Torralba, Ver\'{o}nica and Gonzalez-Reviriego, Nube and Doblas-Reyes, Francisco and Pope, Edward C. D. and Newton, Paula and Liggins, Felicity},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/266f8fde4d78bae8d4f15e5091e5103b0/pbett},
citeulike-article-id = {14388514},
citeulike-linkout-0 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cliser.2017.06.003},
doi = {10.1016/j.cliser.2017.06.003},
interhash = {80216ed398ae8a268aab83b0a324ddd8},
intrahash = {66f8fde4d78bae8d4f15e5091e5103b0},
issn = {24058807},
journal = {Climate Services},
keywords = {wind climateservices colleagues communication energy seasonal renewables hydrology agriculture forecasting euporias visualisation},
month = jul,
posted-at = {2017-07-05 18:19:36},
priority = {2},
timestamp = {2018-06-22T18:38:30.000+0200},
title = {What have we learnt from EUPORIAS climate service prototypes?},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cliser.2017.06.003},
year = 2017
}