Skip to main content

GlobalChange.gov

Utility

  • About USGCRP
  • Agencies

Global search

  • Understand Climate Change
  • Assess National Climate Assessment
  • Explore USGCRP Highlights
  • Browse Reports & Resources
  • Engage Connect & Participate

You are here

  • About USGCRP

Share

Facebook logo Twitter logo Google+ logo LinkedIn logo Reddit logo

Highlights

Since 1989, the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) has submitted annual reports to Congress called Our Changing Planet. The reports describe the status of USGCRP research activities, provide progress updates, and document recent accomplishments.

In particular, Our Changing Planet highlights progress and accomplishments in interagency activities. These highlights represent the broad spectrum of USGCRP activities that extend from Earth system observations, modeling, and fundamental research through synthesis and assessment, decision support, education, and public engagement.

Water Resources

Focusing on the California Drought

Focusing on the California Drought

Since 2011, California has experienced one of its most severe and widespread droughts since record-keeping began in 1895. USGCRP-supported research helps advance drought science and provides the basis for the National Integrated Drought Information System (NIDIS) (Highlight 10), which aims to increase the capacity of the public to better prepare for and respond to drought events through regional Drought Early Warning Systems (DEWS). The NOAA Drought Task...

Read more
Land Use & Land Cover, Ecosystems & Biodiversity

Soil Carbon Storage: A Big Role For Microorganisms

Microbes living in the soil, which play an important part in carbon storage, are affected by farming practices.

The majority of terrestrial (land-based) carbon is stored in soil. With changes in climate and land use, understanding this key player in the carbon cycle is increasingly important. In October 2014, a group of scientists from 13 countries gathered in South Carolina for the Sixth International Workshop on Soil and Sedimentary Organic Matter Stabilization and Destabilization (SOM6). Participants engaged in focused discussions and shared results from

...
Read more
Carbon Cycle

Carbon Community Collaboration

The carbon cycle—or the continual flux of carbon through the atmosphere, oceans, soil, and living organisms—is a foundational component of the Earth system that interacts with climate change and human activities. Through USGCRP and its U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program, Federal agencies are working together and with the scientific community to advance fundamental and applied research in this critical field. Some examples are highlighted below:

  • In 2014, NASA, USDA, DOE, and NOAA

...
Read more
Water Resources

Supporting Resilient Water Resources and Utilities

Green infrastructure projects, such as this stormwater planter, help to collect and absorb runoff, among other benefits. Local-level capacity and reliable cost-benefit information are needed to effectively incorporate such solutions into stormwater manage

Water resources in the United States are affected by a number of climate stressors—including increasing temperatures, changing precipitation patterns, and extreme events like storms and droughts—and these changing conditions have implications for drinking water and stormwater utilities. Federal agencies are working with one another and with state and local partners to build preparedness and sustainability in this essential sector. For instance, the Federal Support Toolbox—grown out of an initiative led by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)—serves as a

...
Read more
Agriculture & Food

Regional Science Networks for Climate-Smart Decision Making

Federally coordinated regional science centers work individually and together on projects that support tangible outcomes in their regions. For example, Western Water Assessment (WWA, a NOAA RISA team) is partnering with the DOI North Central CSC on a coll

Climate change affects every region of the United States differently, and no single Federal program can tackle the full range of regional decision-support needs. Coordination at the regional scale is vital to ensuring that Federally supported science and risk management efforts best meet the information requirements of decision makers in a variety of sectors. USDA, NOAA, and DOI individually support a portfolio of complementary regional networks that deliver climate science and tools to public officials, agricultural producers, natural resource managers, and

...
Read more
Extreme Events

A Toolkit for Climate Resilience Nationwide

The U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkit features science-based resources and real-world case studies to help communities adapt to climate change.

The Administration launched the U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkit in November 2014, with support from the coordinated efforts of various USGCRP agencies—especially NOAA, USGS, USDA, NASA, USACE, and HHS (CDC and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences). The Toolkit aims to help communities, businesses, natural resource managers, and others plan for and respond to the impacts of climate change where they live. As called for in the President’s Climate Action Plan, the Toolkit provides

...
Read more
Observations, Modeling, Water Resources, Land Use & Land Cover, Agriculture & Food, Extreme Events

Mapping Fallowed Farmland During Drought

The greenness of croplands in January is shown relative to the 13-year average from NASA MODIS records. Satellite imagery can be a powerful tool for understanding the impacts of drought on agricultural lands. (Source: NIDIS Newsletter, April 2014)

The severe, sustained drought affecting the Central Valley of California has caused a shortage of water for irrigation and crop production. The effect of this shortage is most immediately evident as an increase in the extent of fallowed farmland (or land taken out of agricultural production), which in turn serves as a proxy for socioeconomic impacts. Decision makers can use information about fallowed land to better understand the severity of drought impacts and to support requests for USDA drought disaster designations or emergency proclamations. USDA

...
Read more
Water Resources

Building Capacity Among Water Resource Managers

In the Southwest, reservoirs such as Lake Powell (above) have reached record-low levels in recent periods of drought. Training for water resource managers is an essential step in preparing for hydrologic extremes in a changing climate.

Climate change presents new challenges for managing water quality and quantity, particularly in areas where water resources are already stressed. Resource managers need scientifically sound, usable information and training to deal with changing patterns of water extremes and other climate-related issues facing the water sector.

To help meet this need, USACE and DOI’s Bureau of Reclamation have developed a training series titled Assessing Natural

...
Read more
International, Arctic

Arctic Observations to Meet Scientific and Societal Needs

Advancing science in the Arctic is crucial to understanding global climate dynamics, supporting policy decisions, and managing nationally and internationally important resources. In coordination with the Interagency Arctic Research Policy Committee (IARPC) and USGEO, USGCRP member agencies observe and monitor the Arctic environment to understand the impacts of global change on this ecologically, culturally, and economically significant region. Polar orbiting satellites provide data that are combined with information from surface-based measurement networks, airborne and

...
Read more
Land Use & Land Cover, Carbon Cycle

Carbon Cycle Science for a Changing World

Inside the prototype for SPRUCE experimental chambers. (Credit: DOE)

The continual cycling of carbon through the atmosphere, oceans, soil, and living organisms is an essential function of the Earth system. The U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Program (under the auspices of USGCRP; carboncyclescience.us) and USGCRP agencies are working to understand how climate change and human activities are altering this foundational component of the environment, and how these alterations feed back to affect climate change. Some examples are highlighted below:

  • At least two thirds of the world’s land-based organic carbon is stored in

...
Read more

Pages

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Currently on page 4
  • Page 5
  • Next page
  • Last page

Filter By Topic

  • Ecosystems & Biodiversity Apply Ecosystems & Biodiversity filter
  • International Apply International filter
  • Mitigation Apply Mitigation filter
  • Coasts Apply Coasts filter
  • Oceans Apply Oceans filter
  • Scenarios Apply Scenarios filter
  • Adaptation Apply Adaptation filter
  • Indicators Apply Indicators filter
  • Human Health Apply Human Health filter
  • Agriculture & Food Apply Agriculture & Food filter
  • Arctic Apply Arctic filter
  • Modeling Apply Modeling filter
  • Water Resources Apply Water Resources filter
  • Land Use & Land Cover Apply Land Use & Land Cover filter
  • Carbon Cycle Apply Carbon Cycle filter
  • Extreme Events Apply Extreme Events filter
  • Observations Apply Observations filter
  • National Climate Assessment Apply National Climate Assessment filter

Filter By Agency

  • (-) Remove Department of Agriculture filter Department of Agriculture
  • National Aeronautics & Space Administration Apply National Aeronautics & Space Administration filter
  • Department of Energy Apply Department of Energy filter
  • Department of Commerce Apply Department of Commerce filter
  • Department of the Interior Apply Department of the Interior filter
  • National Science Foundation Apply National Science Foundation filter
  • Environmental Protection Agency Apply Environmental Protection Agency filter
  • Department of Health & Human Services Apply Department of Health & Human Services filter
  • Department of Defense Apply Department of Defense filter
  • U.S. Agency for International Development Apply U.S. Agency for International Development filter
  • Department of Transportation Apply Department of Transportation filter
  • Department of State Apply Department of State filter

Filter By Region

  • Midwest Apply Midwest filter
  • Southwest Apply Southwest filter

Filter By Report Year

  • 2019 Apply 2019 filter
  • 2014 Apply 2014 filter
  • 2021 Apply 2021 filter
  • 2015 Apply 2015 filter
  • 2020 Apply 2020 filter
  • 2016 Apply 2016 filter
GlobalChange.gov is made possible by our participating agencies
Thirteen Agencies, One Vision: Empower the Nation with Global Change Science
  • USDA
  • DOC
  • DOD
  • DOE
  • HHS
  • DOI
  • DOS
  • DOT
  • EPA
  • NASA
  • NSF
  • SI
  • USAID

Get Our Newsletter

Get Social

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • RSS
  • Contact Us
U.S. Global Change Research Program
1800 G Street, NW, Suite 9100
Washington, D.C. 20006 USA

Tel: +1 202 223 6262
Fax: +1 202 223 3065
Privacy Policy