Links to Material from the Eastern Midwest Assessment Group
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Workshop
A workshop was held in Indianapolis, June 29-30, 1998 as part of the
series of US Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) regional climate
change workshops. This series of workshops is seen as a first step in a
U.S. national assessment of the potential consequences of climate
variability and change. The purpose of the workshop was to begin a
dialogue to identify the sensitivities of the region to climate
variability and change, and to seek opportunities for building
partnerships and initiating coping strategies. The region's economy is
based primarily on industry and agriculture with forest products and water
resources of significance.
The region has traditionally been stressed by weather and climate
variations, including extremes. The workshop was an opportunity not only
to explore these issues, but to examine trade-offs and look for the
possibility of creating partnerships among the diverse stakeholders who
will be affected by future changes, or who are positioned to participate
in the development of coping strategies. Workshop report available in hard
copy from Indiana University, School of Public Affairs, 1315 East 10th
Street, SPEA Building Room 441, Bloomington, IN 47405-1996.
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Issues for Analysis
The proposed assessment would consider a limited number of key sectors
that are critical in the Eastern Midwest region. Five major areas are
presently under consideration for inclusion in the regional assessment:
Agriculture, Forestry, Industry (heavy and construction), Manufacturing,
and Transportation. The focus is on addressing environmental and
socio-economic impacts due to climate changes. The assessment must also
adequately address impacts of climate change adjustment policies as well
as direct climate change impacts.
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Strategy for the Assessment
The Eastern Midwest region assessment is continuing under the auspices
of the National Institute for Global Environmental Change (NIGEC),
established in 1990 with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
Its mission is to carry out research on global environmental change. NIGEC
is comprised of six regional research centers with the Midwestern Regional
Center (MRC) located at Indiana University on the Bloomington campus. It
is administered by the School of Public and Environmental Affairs and
operates in an interdisciplinary, multi-investigator mode, examining the
causes and consequences associated with global environmental change,
particularly climate change due to human modification of the atmosphere.
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The current research projects include:
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Effects of Atmospheric and Climatic Changes on Ecosystems
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Integrated Assessment
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Radiative Forcing Effects and Climate
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Terrestrial Carbon Exchange
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Principal Investigator |
J.C. Randolph, Indiana University |
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Co-Principal Investigators |
Otto Doering, Purdue University
Mike Mazzocco, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign |
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Coordinating Federal Agency |
U.S. Department of Agriculture |
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Agency Representative |
Margot Anderson, US Department of Agriculture |
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Key Issues |
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