Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

An Irish National Framework for Climate Services

View through CrossRef
The Problem In 2018 the Irish government introduced the National Adaptation Framework. This required the Government sectors to produce Sectoral Adaptation Plans. A first attempt at planning adaptation for many of the sectors, leading to an uncoordinated approach across the sectors. Upon review, the process was found to have provided frustration. The limited usability of climate services in the country, the many climate projection models to choose from and the absence of coordinated climate information made it a difficult process fed this frustration. Ireland to yet develop a standardised set of climate projections potentially leading to further difficulties in future decision making. The Solution The launch of the TRANSLATE project, led by Met Éireann – The Irish Meteorological Service, set out to translate the vast amount of future climate projections into a format that is useable, transferrable, and understandable. TRASNLATE aimed to do two things: A) develop a set of standardised national climate projections, B) develop climate services in Ireland suitable to the needs of the adaptation community in Ireland. TRANSLATE was a finite project but opened the conversation around a national approach. It was agreed that climate services needed a more permanent footing to be able to build the required support structure – an operational solution. The Irish ‘National Framework for Climate Services’ (NFCS) gave climate services support a permanent structure to support adaptation. The Implementation The success of the TRANSLATE project brought together the climate service national stakeholders, encouraging collaboration, discussion on common problems. Ultimately, it led to an agreement on the required approach to climate service delivery in Ireland. In June 2022, the National Framework for Climate Services was established after a government decision – tasking Met Éireann to develop and provide coordination for the service. The NFCS for the first time provides a nationally coordinated approach to climate services in Ireland. Partnering with Ireland’s pre-existing ‘Climate Ireland’ platform to provide the standardised projections through the widely used adaptation portal. This serves as perfect example of how the NFCS will bring together the climate services community. The NFCS will be a permanent centre for national climate services that will identify the users’ climate information needs, co-develop the tailored product identified and make these freely available. The NFCS aims to help users select and use the appropriate information in their planning and decision making by offering a freely available consultancy service in addition to the provision of climate data. The NFCS aims to support a wide lens of users, from Government sectors to semi-state and private sectors. Through input from its many contributing organisations, support to the Local Authority in their climate action planning is drastically improved, with a major improvement in support to the Sectoral Adaptation Plans to come.
Title: An Irish National Framework for Climate Services
Description:
The Problem In 2018 the Irish government introduced the National Adaptation Framework.
This required the Government sectors to produce Sectoral Adaptation Plans.
A first attempt at planning adaptation for many of the sectors, leading to an uncoordinated approach across the sectors.
Upon review, the process was found to have provided frustration.
The limited usability of climate services in the country, the many climate projection models to choose from and the absence of coordinated climate information made it a difficult process fed this frustration.
Ireland to yet develop a standardised set of climate projections potentially leading to further difficulties in future decision making.
The Solution The launch of the TRANSLATE project, led by Met Éireann – The Irish Meteorological Service, set out to translate the vast amount of future climate projections into a format that is useable, transferrable, and understandable.
TRASNLATE aimed to do two things: A) develop a set of standardised national climate projections, B) develop climate services in Ireland suitable to the needs of the adaptation community in Ireland.
TRANSLATE was a finite project but opened the conversation around a national approach.
It was agreed that climate services needed a more permanent footing to be able to build the required support structure – an operational solution.
The Irish ‘National Framework for Climate Services’ (NFCS) gave climate services support a permanent structure to support adaptation.
The Implementation The success of the TRANSLATE project brought together the climate service national stakeholders, encouraging collaboration, discussion on common problems.
Ultimately, it led to an agreement on the required approach to climate service delivery in Ireland.
In June 2022, the National Framework for Climate Services was established after a government decision – tasking Met Éireann to develop and provide coordination for the service.
The NFCS for the first time provides a nationally coordinated approach to climate services in Ireland.
Partnering with Ireland’s pre-existing ‘Climate Ireland’ platform to provide the standardised projections through the widely used adaptation portal.
This serves as perfect example of how the NFCS will bring together the climate services community.
The NFCS will be a permanent centre for national climate services that will identify the users’ climate information needs, co-develop the tailored product identified and make these freely available.
The NFCS aims to help users select and use the appropriate information in their planning and decision making by offering a freely available consultancy service in addition to the provision of climate data.
The NFCS aims to support a wide lens of users, from Government sectors to semi-state and private sectors.
Through input from its many contributing organisations, support to the Local Authority in their climate action planning is drastically improved, with a major improvement in support to the Sectoral Adaptation Plans to come.

Related Results

“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
“The Earth Is Dying, Bro”
Climate Change and Children Australian children are uniquely situated in a vast landscape that varies drastically across locations. Spanning multiple climatic zones—from cool tempe...
Irish Literature and the Union with Britain, 1801–1921
Irish Literature and the Union with Britain, 1801–1921
Studies of Romantic and Victorian literary culture often sideline Irish writing—not always out of Anglocentric prejudice, but also because Irish literature in those periods was fre...
Ethics of climate change : a normative account
Ethics of climate change : a normative account
Consider, for instance, you and your family have lived around a place where you enjoyed the flora and fauna of the land as well as the natural environment. Fishing and farming were...
Ireland’s Route to a permanent National Framework for Climate Services
Ireland’s Route to a permanent National Framework for Climate Services
The establishment of a National Framework for Climate Services in Ireland followed a low risk, yet high impact “project-first” approach to understand the nation...
Modern Interpretations of Irish Mythology
Modern Interpretations of Irish Mythology
Modern versions of Irish mythological tales circulated widely from the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth, a period sometimes termed the Irish Revival, the Irish Liter...
Climate and Culture
Climate and Culture
Climate is, presently, a heatedly discussed topic. Concerns about the environmental, economic, political and social consequences of climate change are of central interest in academ...
The 1916 Easter Rising
The 1916 Easter Rising
On Easter Monday, 24 April 1916, over one thousand Irish rebels occupied prominent buildings across Dublin, triggering a battle for control of what was then a major UK city. Confro...
Ireland
Ireland
Irish Victorian literature is full of possibilities for research, and interest in it is growing continually. Long neglected, its time has apparently come at last. In the past it su...

Back to Top