Please submit your abstract to the first joint AGU session of the U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program and the E.U. Integrated Carbon Observation System via this submission site by July 31, 2019.
Forging Linkages in Carbon Cycle Science
Session ID#: 80552
Session Description:
Organizations representing the two most extensive networks for measuring, monitoring and understanding the carbon cycle on continental scales, the U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program (CCSP) and the
E.U. Integrated Carbon Observation System (ICOS), produce and use a tremendous amount of high quality data and analyses for understanding the carbon cycle across multiple scales. Much more can be learned when efforts from these and other multi-partner and multi-platform systems and networks are compared and contrasted, further advancing our ability to understand carbon cycle feedbacks and the level of threat they pose, improving our ability to track the influence of fossil fuels and other contributors to increasing atmospheric CO
2 and CH
4 and enhancing negative emissions science. This session seeks presentations using data from multiple networks or comparing and contrasting findings with different sets of data to improve carbon cycle understanding, including carbon cycle variability and uncertainties to inform policy-making processes and decisions.
Co-Sponsor(s):
Index Terms:
0315 Biosphere/atmosphere interactions [ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE]
0428 Carbon cycling [BIOGEOSCIENCES]
1615 Biogeochemical cycles, processes, and modeling [GLOBAL CHANGE]
1631 Land/atmosphere interactions [GLOBAL CHANGE]
Primary Convener: Gyami Shrestha, U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program & UCAR, Washington, DC, United States and Joint Team of U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program & E.U. Integrated Carbon Observation System
Conveners: Werner Leo Kutsch, ICOS ERIC, Head Office, Helsinki, Finland, Zhiliang Zhu, USGS, Reston, VA, United States, Alexander T Vermeulen, Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands, Petten, Netherlands and Joint Team of U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program & E.U. Integrated Carbon Observation System
Primary Liaison: James H Butler, NOAA, Boulder, CO, United States and Joint Team of U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program & E.U. Integrated Carbon Observation System