The final agenda for the meeting is below. You can find the full agenda with presentation abstracts here.
<Day2>
9:00-9:20 Assessment of land-climate feedbacks and systematic biases of LSMs: Land Surface, Snow and Soil Moisture Model Intercomparison Project (LS3MIP) – Hyungjun Kim (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
9:20-9:40 Earth System Model-Snow Model Intercomparison Project (ESM-SnowMIP) – Gerhard Krinner (LGGE, France)
9:40-10:00 Advancing our understanding of the impacts of historic and projected land use in the Earth System: The Land Use Model Intercomparison Project (LUMIP) – Dave Lawrence (NCAR, USA)
10:00-10:30 Discussion
<Day2>
11:00-11:20 Inter-Sectoral Impact Model Intercomparison Project (ISIMIP): Modeling climate impacts across sectors – Jacob Schewe (PIK, Germany)
11:20-11:40 Opportunities and constraints for improved water resources management using different lenses and scales – Yoshihide Wada (IIASA, Austria)
11:40-12:00 Specifying sources of humans’ water abstraction by using the H08 global hydrological model – Naota Hanasaki (NIES, Japan)
12:00-12:30 Discussion
<Day3>
9:00-9:20 Delivering Hydrologic Science to Society:Successes and Challenges in the Western United States – James Famiglietti (JPL/NASA, USA)
9:20-9:40 Satellite Remote Sensing and Model Integration in JAXA – Riko Oki (EORC/JAXA, Japan)
9:40-10:00 DIAS Contributing to Climate Change Analysis and Disaster Risk Reduction – Akiyuki Kawasaki (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
10:00-10:30 Discussion
<Day3>
11:00-11:20 Systematic Evaluation of Land Surface Models Using the International Land Model Benchmarking (ILAMB) Package – Forrest Hoffman (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA)
11:20-11:40 Protocol for the Analysis of Land Surface models (PALS) and modelevaluation.org – Gab Abramowitz (University of South Wales, Australia)
11:40-12:00 Targeted experiments to assess the Paris Agreement on Climate Change – Daniel Mitchell (Bristol University, UK)
12:00-12:30 Discussion
<Day4>
9:00-9:20 Global Hydrology in the Anthropocene and SDGs – Taikan Oki (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
9:20-9:40 Socio-hydrology: Use-inspired Basic Science in the Age of the Anthropocene – Murugesu Sivapalan (University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, USA)
9:40-10:00 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Lab: Rural Systems Visioneering – Joon Kim (Seoul National University, Korea)
10:00-10:30 Discussion
<Day4>
11:00-12:30 Reports/Discussion/Closing remarks
Rapporteurs: Aaron Boone (Meteo-France, Franch), Ahmed Tawfik (NCAR, USA), Kurt Solander (Loa Alamos National Lab., USA)
<Day2>
14:00-14:15 /* Invited */ Climate change and adaptation strategies for flood control plan in Hokkaido, Japan – Tomohito Yamada (Hokkaido University, Japan)
14:15-14:30 /* Invited */ California’s water cycle extremes: from drought to deluge – Jin-Ho Yoon (Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, Korea)
14:30-14:45 Impacts of climate change on hydrologic extremes under 1.5/2.0C degrees global warming – Satoshi Watanabe (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
14:45-15:00 Convection and Land Cover Change: Interpreting simulations, gaps, and moving forward – Ahmed Tawfik (NCAR, USA)
15:00-15:15 Future projection of extreme precipitation events linked to temperature over Japan under different future scenarios – Sridhara Nayak (National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience, Japan)
15:15-15:30 Recent extreme events: What’s predictable, what’s not, and what to do – Simon S.-Y. Wang (Utah State University / Utah Climate Center, USA)
<Day2>
16:00-16:15 /* Invited */ Local and remote climate response to deforestation in Maritime Continent – Min-Hui Lo (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
16:15-16:30 /* Invited */ Historical socio-hydrology in Japan: capturing the regime shifts and phenomena in the modern era – Shinichiro Nakamura (Nagoya University, Japan)
16:30-16:45 Multi-Model Regional Simulation of Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture and Ecosystems in the Southwestern United States – Seung Hee Kim (Chapman University, USA)
16:45-17:00 100-year Global Warming Potential of Rice Crop Intensity – Dim Wanndet (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
17:00-17:15 Evaluation of the application of the ISI-MIP bias-correction method of future simulations of climate over Indonesia for the implementation of Climate Change Adaptation Plans – Martin Gomez Garcia (Nippon Koei Co., Ltd. R&D, Japan)
17:15-17:30 Modeling Impacts of Irrigation on Land Surface Hydrology and Subseasonal Forecast – Yadu Pokhrel (Michigan State University, USA)
<Day3>
14:00-14:15 /* Invited */ Development of global and regional flood forecasting system and their validation – Kei Yoshimura (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
14:15-14:30 Sensitivity analysis of historical weather documents for reconstructing past climate – Panduka Neluwala (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
14:30-14:45 The Computable Catchment: Interactive media for model-data sharing with implications for scientist-stakeholder access and participation – Christopher Duffy (Penn State University, USA)
14:45-15:00 Hydrologic Sciences for Flood Disaster Mitigations: Integration of Local Information and Flood Modeling – Takahiro Sayama (DPRI, Kyoto University, Japan)
15:00-15:15 Towards ecohydrological drought monitoring and prediction using a land data assimilation system – Yohei Sawada (Meteorological Research Institute, Japan Meteorological Agency, Japan)
15:15-15:30 The performance of land surface and cumulus convection scheme in the simulation of Indian Summer Monsoon using RegCM4 – Suman Maity (Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Malaysia)
<Day3>
16:00-16:15 /* Invited */ Progress in understanding hydrologic flooding using GRACE – John Reager (NASA JPL, USA)
16:15-16:30 Distribution of debris thickness and its effect on glacier melt at large scale – Yukiko Hirabayashi (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
16:30-16:45 Reconstructing climate-driven water storage variability – Vincent Humphrey (ETH Zurich)
16:45-17:00 Local Ensemble Transform Kalman Filter (LETKF) data assimilation of altimetry data for SWOT mission – Jean-Francois Vuillaume (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
17:00-17:15 Global distribution of groundwater-vegetation spatial covariation – Sujan Koirala (Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry)
17:15-17:30 Heavy rain prediction applying satellite-based cloud data assimilation over land – Rie Seto (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
<Day2>
14:00-15:30 Description, Installation, and Basic Operation – Nathan Collier (ORNL, USA)
<Day3>
14:00-15:30 User issues, Package Design, and Advanced Usage – Nathan Collier (ORNL, USA)
<Day2>
16:00-16:15 TBD – Petrus J van Oevelen (Int. GEWEX Project Office, USA)
16:15-16:30 WCRP and GEWEX science of relevance to GLASS – Sonia Seneviratne (ETH, Switzerland)
16:30-16:45 The current status of activities in the GEWEX Global Land/Atmosphere System Study (GLASS) – Mike Ek (NCEP, USA)
16:45-17:00 GSWP3 as a liaison across communities – Hyungjun Kim (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
17:00-17:30 Discussion
<Day3>
16:00-16:15 Simulating the impacts of climate extremes: the case of the 2003 European heat wave – Jacob Schewe (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Germany)
16:15-16:30 Benchmarking carbon fluxes of the ISIMIP2a biome models – Jinfeng CHANG (LOCEAN-IPSL, France)
16:30-16:45 Impact simulations for ISI-MIP with a process-based biome model, VISIT – Akihiko Ito (National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan)
16:45-17:00 Human impact parameterization in global hydrological models improves estimates of monthly discharges and hydrological extremes: a multi-model validation study – Ted Veldkamp (VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands)
17:00-17:30 Discussion
<Day4>
12:30-15:30 Joint Project Meetings /* invitation only */