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Australia Begins Climate Project With China

This project will use environmental informatics to improve understanding of the interaction of the Australian and East Asian monsoon systems.
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Jun 07, 2007
CSIRO and the Australian Greenhouse Office (AGO) have signed a two-year funding agreement for collaboration between CSIRO statisticians and the Institute of Atmospheric Physics of the Chinese Academy of Science. The project will investigate climate and rainfall linkages between China and Australia. "The objective of this project is to improve understanding of the interaction of the Australian and East Asian monsoon systems," says CSIRO Environmental Statistician Dr Bronwyn Harch.

"This research will give us more information about the impacts of climate change, especially in the areas of agriculture and water resource management."

The East Asian summer monsoon carries moist air from the Indian and Pacific Oceans to East Asia. The monsoonal flow interacts with the Australian winter monsoon.

The project will include the analysis of possible relationships between summer rainfall over north China and winter rainfall over southwest Western Australia, and the development and application of statistical models to assess the impacts of the Australian monsoons on summer rainfall over north China.

The project is being conducted under the auspices of the Australia-China Climate Change Partnership. Funded through the AGO's Bilateral Climate Change Partnership Programme, it is one of 11 projects agreed and announced by the former Australian Minister for the Environment, Senator Ian Campbell, and China's National Development Reform Commission Vice Chairman Jiang Weixin in Beijing last year.

These new projects build on existing collaboration through the Partnership to address climate change including joint activity on renewable energy and other low emission technologies, energy efficiency and agriculture.

Related Links
CSIRO China Climate Project
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation



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UN Chief Concerned Over Impact Of Travel On Climate Change
Madrid (AFP) Jun 05, 2007
United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon expressed concern during a visit to Spain on Tuesday over the impact that the drastic rise in global travel is having on climate change. "Some 840 million people travel across borders each year. An even greater number move within their own countries," he said at the Madrid headquarters of the UN's World Tourism Organization.







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