Title: Summary and Recap: CSES
1Summary and Recap CSESs Impact on the
PNWImplications for Climate Services in the PNW
- Ed Miles
- CSES Review
- December 3, 2004
2Summary and Recap Contributions to Climate
Impacts Science
- Defining the PDO
- Identifying ENSO and PDO impacts on PNW winter
climate and key natural resources - Identifying 20th century trends on PNW
temperature, precipitation, and snowpack - Extending the paleorecord for PNW climate,
streamflow, forests, and summer sea surface
temperatures in the Strait of Juan de Fuca - Defining and evaluating the potential impacts of
global climate change on PNW climate and
resources - Identifying barriers to effective use of climate
information and characteristics of adaptive
institutions
3Summary and Recap Contributions to Decision
Support (CV)
- Seasonal climate outlook for the PNW
- Climate forecasts for use in resource management
- Long-lead (1 year) seasonal streamflow forecasts
based on ENSO/PDO - Long-lead (1 year) seasonal marine survival
forecasts for Oregon coastal coho salmon - Mid-term (6 month) municipal reservoir forecasts
- Near-term (7-14 day) extreme weather risk
forecasts - Reinstitution of the Office of the Washington
State Climatologist
4Summary and Recap Contributions to Decision
Support (CC)
- Climate change temperature, snowpack,
precipitation, and streamflow scenarios -
- Climate change streamflow scenarios for water
supply planning (bias-corrected, targeted
locations) - Client-based research consultancies (e.g.,
climate change impacts on municipal water
supplies) - Optimization models for evaluating impacts of
climate change on streamflow management - Technical assistance to watershed planning efforts
5CSESs Impact on the PNW
6Influencing Operations and Policy
- Cultivated agency interest in information
supporting planning for climate variability and
change. Evidenced by - Strong attendance at meetings (e.g. fall
forecast, climate/salmon, hydrologic scenarios,
climate and water policy meetings) - Research partnerships and consultancies (e.g.,
municipal water suppliers, ID Dept of Water
Resources, Northwest Power and Conservation
Council, USACE, Bureau of Reclamation) - Requests for presentations (75/year)
- Survey results demonstrating institutional
learning in key sectors
7A Sea Change in Perceptions
Dramatic change in stakeholder perceptions of
value and relevance of information about climate
variability and change
1995 Few managers saw role for climate info,
recognized predictability of climate, or
possessed a conceptual framework for applying
climate info
1997-98 El NiƱo and concomittant media
attention stimulated widespread interest in
information about climate variability and in CIG
Most stakeholders unfamiliar with potential
impacts of climate change and unprepared to use
such information
2001 Senior-level water resources managers
recognize climate change as a potentially
significant threat to regional water resources
acknowledge climate change information as
critical to future planning
2001/2 50-year drought brings intense media
attention to issue and CIGs work ? public
private pressure on State agencies to include CC
impacts in long-term planning ? significant
involvement of CIG in multiple efforts see below
2003/4 Continued significant breakthroughs with
stakeholder groups highlighted below
8Impacts on Fisheries Science, Management and
Recovery Planning
- Information about PDO and ecosystem regime shifts
percolating through Pacific fisheries management
agencies - International Pacific Halibut Commission,
International Pacific Salmon Commission, North
Pacific Fisheries Management Council, Pacific
Fisheries Management Council, AK/WA/OR Depts of
Fish and Wildlife - Collaboration on climate and coho life cycle
studies with NWFSC (Lawson) and AFSC (Logerwell) - 4 paper series led to formal collaboration
arrangement with NWFSC - Proposed NOAA/NWFSC initiative on climate change
and freshwater ecosystems (CIG, NWFSC, U. Idaho) - WA Dept. of Fish and Wildlife salmon management
changed to recognize climate uncertainty - Ongoing collaboration with Col. Riv. Intertribal
Fish Commission - CRITFC developed proposed alternative Col. Riv.
operating plan based on CIGs streamflow
projections - Current PhD work on chinook salmon (Sharma)
- NWFSCs Oceans and Human Health Initiative
collaboration - Pilot study of climate change and Snohomish R.
salmon recovery planning with NWFSC (Ruckelshaus,
Battin, Palmer, Wiley)
9Specific Examples of CSESs Influence on
Operations and Policy
- CSES asked to participate on WA and OR advisory
committees for West Coast Governors Climate
Change Initiative and write a high-level briefing
memorandum on PNW climate impacts for the
governors offices (July 04) - COE/CSES climate change impacts study proposed
for the Green River. Larger goal help draft
national guidance for COE incorporation of
climate change into project analysis (11/04) - CSES asked by Skagit River System Coop. to
develop a watershed-based climate impacts
assessment for Skagit Basin (10/04)
10Specific Examples Influencing Ops and Policy
contd
- Utilities roundtable from the Puget Sound region
established in fall 2004 to discuss the use of
climate information in electric utilities
management. Will meet 2x/year in March and
October (key decision periods). - Northwest Power and Conservation Council adding a
climate change chapter to agencys 5th power
plan. Looking at implications of climate change
for streamflow in the power system. - CSES asked by the COE to prepare memo on climate
change impacts to Kootenai River flows as part of
Section 7 ESA consultation on White Sturgeon
(11/04). - Query from Senator John Kerrys office on
legislation needed to help agencies adapt to
changing streamflows as a result of climate
change (5/04).
11Specific Examples Influencing Ops and Policy
contd
- Studies for Seattle Public Utilities, Portland
Water Dept, Tualatin Water Dept, ID Water Dept,
Northwest Power and Conservation Council. - Private sector and environmental organizations
demanded that OR Water Dept include climate
change in long-term planning as a result of CIGs
work and media coverage. - Governor Lockes keynote address at state
watershed meeting stating that climate change is
a major long-term challenge and referencing
likely impacts on the PNW (11/19/02). - Climate change added to North Pacific Research
Boards Strategic Plan for physical/biological
and human dimensions research to encourage
systematic study ala CIG in North Pacific.
12Specific Examples Influencing Ops and Policy
contd
- Key briefings and presentations
- Invited speaker at U.K. AAAS/House Science
Committee-sponsored briefing on climate change in
D.C. panel member at AAAS special session on
climate change (Feb 11-13, 2004) - Testimony on snowpack trends before U.S. Senate
Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation (April 26, 2004) - 1 hour presentation on climate change before
special session of the Idaho Committee on Natural
Resources (June 3, 2004) - 1 hour presentation on CSES, climate change, and
decision support before Oregon House Subcommittee
on Water (August 9, 2004)
13Work with the Media
- CSES has established an important and valuable
working relationship with local and national
media - Hundreds of local and national news stories
featuring CSES research, researchers since 97 - Major Seattle P-I special report on 11/13/03
- Stories in San Francisco Chronicle, Seattle P-I,
Idaho Statesman, Albuquerque Journal, The
Oregonian - Featured in radio, television programs (KPLU
(88.5 FM), KZOK (102.5 FM), PBSs The NewsHour
with Jim Lehrer)
14All results to-date based on this model
15Institutionalizing the CSES
- Since its inception in 1995, CSES has become
- The leader in exploring the impacts of climate
variability and change on the PNW - A regionally-recognized and widely respected
source for information about climate impacts,
assessment methodologies, and potential response
strategies - This success results directly from the diverse,
inter-disciplinary, integrated, and committed
research team that makes up CSES - This success has come despite the difficulty of
sustaining an interdisciplinary group in a
University environment due to - Low Salaries
- Lack of permanent positions
- Inability to reward non-academic pursuits
- Lack of permanent University commitment to
address problems of PNW
16To the Future Integrated Watershed Analysis
Responding to stakeholder demand for information
applicable to real-world watershed planning issues
17Implications for the Transition to Operational
Climate Services in the PNW
- Developing the institutional capacity to provide
climate services is neither quick nor easy.
Requires - Defining the types of climate information that
are most useful for the specified applications - Producing very specific, mutually defined
products - Building trust with stakeholders over time
- Developing an integrated research and outreach
team for continued innovation - The successful delivery of climate services
requires the establishment (and maintenance over
time) of a middle-man between the providers and
users of climate information - Must have research and interpretive/outreach
arms, e.g., climate extension service - Individual agencies and industries assume
operational responsibilities only after products
are developed, tested, and demonstrated
18External Stresses
Institutional Barriers
- Climate Research Community
- Seasonal/interannual climate forecasting
- Anthropogenic climate change projections
- Diagnostic analysis and interpretation
Climate Impacts Group
Managed Natural Resource Systems
climate
Nature
- Institutions
- - Resource Managers
- Policymakers
- User Communities
CLIMATE IMPACTS SCIENCE
nature
humans
Adaptation Change
19The Future
- The transition to climate services for the PNW,
and its ultimate form (University, Govt, Private
Sector), remains to be mutually defined by NOAA
and CSES.