ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003.

"Climate variability and change and increases in UV radiation have become important issues in the Arctic over the past few decades. It has become imperative to examine possible future impacts on the environment and its living resources, on human health, and on relevant economic sectors. The Arc...

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Main Author: Corell, Robert W.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: ACIA Secretariat 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11374/569
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spelling ftarcticcouncil:oai:https://oaarchive.arctic-council.org:11374/569 2024-09-15T17:34:38+00:00 ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003. Corell, Robert W. 2003-03 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11374/569 en eng ACIA Secretariat Corell, Robert W., 2003. ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003. ACIA Secretariat. http://hdl.handle.net/11374/569 Summary Report 2003 ftarcticcouncil 2024-07-05T03:05:32Z "Climate variability and change and increases in UV radiation have become important issues in the Arctic over the past few decades. It has become imperative to examine possible future impacts on the environment and its living resources, on human health, and on relevant economic sectors. The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment is expected to lead to useful information for the nations of the Arctic region, their economy, resources, and peoples. The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) is designed to evaluate and synthesize knowledge on climate variability, climate change, and increased ultraviolet (UV) radiation and their consequences across the entire Arctic region. The goal is to provide useful and reliable information to the governments, organizations, and resident communities of the Arctic to create the basis for more informed policy options to address such changes. Climate variability and change, and more recently, notable increases in UV radiation resulting from stratospheric ozone depletion, have become important issues in the Arctic over the past few decades. The results of scientific research and indigenous knowledge have increasingly documented climatic changes that are more pronounced in the Arctic region than in other regions of the world or are critical to our understanding of global-scale climatic processes. Observations from indigenous cultures of the Arctic indicate that the physical environment, as well as the flora and fauna, has been rapidly changing on time-scales of a few years to decades .The ACIA is examining possible future impacts and vulnerabilities on the environment and its living resources, on human well-being and health, and on buildings, roads and infrastructure. The ACIA is designed to develop fundamental and useful information, including policy recommendations, for the nations of the Arctic Region, their economies, resources, and the communities and residents of the Arctic." /./ Other/Unknown Material ACIA Arctic Arctic Climate Impact Assessment Arctic Climate change Human health Arctic Council Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Council Repository
op_collection_id ftarcticcouncil
language English
description "Climate variability and change and increases in UV radiation have become important issues in the Arctic over the past few decades. It has become imperative to examine possible future impacts on the environment and its living resources, on human health, and on relevant economic sectors. The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment is expected to lead to useful information for the nations of the Arctic region, their economy, resources, and peoples. The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA) is designed to evaluate and synthesize knowledge on climate variability, climate change, and increased ultraviolet (UV) radiation and their consequences across the entire Arctic region. The goal is to provide useful and reliable information to the governments, organizations, and resident communities of the Arctic to create the basis for more informed policy options to address such changes. Climate variability and change, and more recently, notable increases in UV radiation resulting from stratospheric ozone depletion, have become important issues in the Arctic over the past few decades. The results of scientific research and indigenous knowledge have increasingly documented climatic changes that are more pronounced in the Arctic region than in other regions of the world or are critical to our understanding of global-scale climatic processes. Observations from indigenous cultures of the Arctic indicate that the physical environment, as well as the flora and fauna, has been rapidly changing on time-scales of a few years to decades .The ACIA is examining possible future impacts and vulnerabilities on the environment and its living resources, on human well-being and health, and on buildings, roads and infrastructure. The ACIA is designed to develop fundamental and useful information, including policy recommendations, for the nations of the Arctic Region, their economies, resources, and the communities and residents of the Arctic." /./
format Other/Unknown Material
author Corell, Robert W.
spellingShingle Corell, Robert W.
ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003.
author_facet Corell, Robert W.
author_sort Corell, Robert W.
title ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003.
title_short ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003.
title_full ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003.
title_fullStr ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003.
title_full_unstemmed ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003.
title_sort acia arctic climate impact assessment. progress report. march 2003.
publisher ACIA Secretariat
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/11374/569
genre ACIA
Arctic
Arctic Climate Impact Assessment
Arctic
Climate change
Human health
genre_facet ACIA
Arctic
Arctic Climate Impact Assessment
Arctic
Climate change
Human health
op_relation Corell, Robert W., 2003. ACIA Arctic Climate Impact Assessment. PROGRESS REPORT. March 2003. ACIA Secretariat.
http://hdl.handle.net/11374/569
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