*Workshop on the “**Development and application of climate emulator**s”*



*Time**: 20-22 April 2023, 1pm Thursday to 1pm Saturday*

*Venue**: **Talent Garden**,** Liechtensteinstrasse 111-115**,** 1090 *
*Vienna,** Austria*

*Tel.: **+43 (0)1 2058183**, Web: https://talentgarden.org/en/
<https://talentgarden.org/en/>*



Climate emulators hold the key to efficient and comprehensive impact
assessment, scenario analysis and the design of climate policy. Despite
their efficiency, they are possibly rather accurate emulators of
state-of-the-art “Earth system models”, running at lightning speed on
laptop computers, or, facilitating the generation of very large ensembles
of simulations on supercomputers. Accuracy can be hampered – regionally at
least – by bifurcations and other nonlinearities of the system. Coupling
emulators with “Integrated impact assessment” models (IAM) or conceptual
models of “tipping elements” of the climate system would facilitate impact
and risk analysis in terms of economic development, the health of
ecological systems, or worse. Due to their computational efficiency, they
are well suited also to solve “inverse problems”, such as those for
emission abatement or geo-manipulation required given (limited) commitments
or technological abilities concerning one or the other. There are a number
of approaches to emulator development; some require a specific experimental
design and new climate model simulations, some aim at using existing,
archived, e.g.. CMIP-X, simulation data.



We are seeking contributions to the workshop on the *topics* including but
not exclusive of:

·      Practical and theoretical advances in response theory;

·      Development of climate emulators using response theory, AI,
conceptual models (fitting), etc.;

·      Performance assessment of emulators;

·      Development and application of IAMs, ecological models;

·      Game theoretical approaches to “optimizing”/predicting climate
policy;

·      Tipping point analysis via complex and conceptual models;

·      Developments in the light of the Paris2015 targets.



The *workshop* is *aim*ed at mapping the landscape of the state-of-the-art
and current research trends in impact assessment and climate policy
development; a review of the Paris2015 targets and developments since; and
a lively and constructive debate on key and sensitive questions like
modelling uncertainty, research into and practice of geo-manipulation,
a.k.a. geoengineering or climate intervention, communicating risk and
public outreach, consultation. We foresee high quality contributions from
experts of their fields of research, crosspollination of ideas whether it
is about approaches or synergic effects thanks to interdisciplinary
collaborations. The workshop will showcase the climate emulator and
underlying data sets being the outcomes of the Young Scientist Fellowship
project “*The FORced RESponse of the climate system: Towards efficient
impact assessment*”, FORRES. We will seek feedback from the participants on
the potentials and room for improvement of these outcomes, while they are
being offered for use by any interested party.



Confirmed *speakers* are:



·      Michael Ghil, ENS, Paris

·      Marcin Czupryna, Cracow University of Economics

·      Nick Watkins, Univ. Warwick

·      Chris Smith, IIASA, Vienna / Univ. Leeds / Met Office, Exeter

·      Nico Wunderling, PIK, Potsdam

·      David Stainforth, LSE, London

·      Gábor Drótos, Atomki, Debrecen

·      Valerio Lucarini, Univ. Reading

·      Jonathan F Donges, PIK, Potsdam

·      Robbin Bastiaansen, Univ. Utrecht

·      Ben Sanderson, CICERO, Oslo

·      Guilherme Mendonca, MPI-M, Hamburg

·      Francesco Ragone, UCLouvian, Brussels

·      Leeya Pressburger, PNNL, Seattle



*Abstracts* (interest of attendance) are (is) to be *submitted* (indicted)
to Tamás Bódai ([email protected]) *by 10 Feb*. Late submissions are
potentially considered pending on the saturation of the venue capacity.



We look forward to welcoming you at *Talent Garden**, Vienna*, Austria, and
sharing knowledge and fun during our event.



The organizers:



Tamás Bódai, ICCP, Busan; MATE, Budapest;
https://ibsclimate.org/people/tamas-bodai/

Valerio Lembo, CNR, Rome; https://www.isac.cnr.it/it/users/valerio-lembo

Sundaresan Aneesh, ICCP, Busan;
https://ibsclimate.org/people/aneesh-sundaresan/



Note: The workshop receives funding form IBS, Korea,
https://www.ibs.re.kr/eng.do

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