Part of EDIPI’s obligations towards the EU regarding the execution of the Grant Agreement is production of deliverables and reaching milestones. They inform about the project’s progress, whether from the technical side or scientific part. The public deliverables and milestones will be available below.
Confidential Deliverables (completion date)
- D1.1 – Signature of the Consortium Agreement (14 April 2021)
- D1.2 – Supervisory board of network (23 April 2021)
- D1.3 – Completion of the Data Management Plan (16 June 2021)
- D1.4 – Progress Report (11 March 2022)
- D2.1 – CDP updates and interim reports on CDP progress (7 February 2023)
- D2.2 – Final CDP Reports (13 June 2024)
- D3.1 – Approved ESR local training (4 February 2022)
- D8.2 – Plan for Dissemination and Exploitation of Results (7 July 2021)
- D8.4 – Updated Plan for Dissemination and Exploitation of Results (24 August 2022)
- D9.1 – NEC – Requirement No. 1 (18 January 2022)
Public Deliverables (link to documents)
Outreach and communication
- D8.1 – Project website: https://edipi-itn.eu/
- D8.3 – Public education outreach:
- “Cheerful cyclones” – explaining the formation and characteristics of cyclones through a story. Story available on UU box (pdf)
- “Heat wave” poster – explaining basic facts about heat waves. Poster available in UU box (jpeg). This poster is also available in Swedish (pdf)
- “Drought & Floods” poster – explaining droughts and floods side to side. Poster available in UU box (jpeg). This poster is also available in Swedish (pdf)
- “Windstorms” poster – explaining some facts about windstorms in central Europe. Poster available in UU box (jpg). This poster is also available in Swedish (pdf)
- “Scale the drought” – explaining the occurrence of droughts through the image of a weight scale. Available in UU box (pdf)
- D8.6 – Material for the development of teachers:
EDIPI ESRs have created the following serious games to increase teachers’ and students’ interests in extreme weather events and the impact of climate change. This material is publicly available and can be downloaded from the links below.
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- S2OuP – Spin to Save Our Planet: this card game is designed to heighten students’ awareness of the connection between climate change and extreme weather events. Available in UU box (pdf)
- WE GUESS – Weather Guesser: this interactive card game will allow students to learn about different types of severe weather events, their location, their relation to climate change, their impact and the adaptation and mitigation measures that can be taken. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Climate countdown: this board game explores how climate change affects different people of other ages and other parts of the world. Players have the chance to tackle climate change by choosing different climate policies and adaptation measures. Available in UU box (pdf)
- ClimarisQ briefing paper: it provides the background information necessary for teachers to use this videogame in a classroom setting. ClimarisQ is a game conceived by Davide Faranda (EDIPI’s training coordinator, CNRS) through the CNRS – AMCSTI – ISC-PIF scientific mediation incubator on complex systems. Available in UU box (pdf)
- D8.7 – EDIPI Replication Guidelines : Guidelines for replication of the EDIPI framework in other fields.
Available in UU box (pdf)
Pedagogical material from the network’s training events
- D4.1 – Pedagogical material:
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- Pascal Yiou (2021). “Basics of extreme event modelling”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Davide Faranda (2021). “Physics-driven methods for understanding Extreme Events in the Earth System.” Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Freddy Bouchet (2021). “Introduction to statistics & statistical mechanics for climate dynamics & extremes”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Freddy Bouchet (2021). “Predicting Extreme Heat Waves Using Rare Event Simulations and Deep Neural Networks”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Rodrigo Caballero (2021). “Introductory exercises: data analysis with xarray and scipy (with solutions)”. Workbook available on Jupyter Notebook Viewer
- Python short projects based on the lectures. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Extreme Events Fact-sheets group work instructions. Available on UU box (pdf)
- Robert Vautard (2022). “Attribution of extreme events to climate change”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Aglae Jezequel (2022). “Impacts of extreme events and climate change”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Peter Ditlevsen (2022). “Is climate change predictable? The case of tipping points”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Philippe Naveau (2022). “Advanced statistical methods for extremes: how to compare them”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Riccardo Biella (2023). “Extreme Events in the Socio-Ecological system: complexity, feedbacks and unintended consequences”. Presentation available in UU box (pdf)
- Rozemien De Troch, Emilie Delhaye, Alex Dewalque, Mamina Muyldermans, Marc Christiaens (2023). “Science communication to valorize your research: best practices from RMI”. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Piet Termonia (2023). “Atmospheric modelling”. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Gwendal Rivière (2023). “Idealized modelling of the atmosphere and climate”. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Exercise: System Dynamics (instructions and data). All three documents (pdf) available in a UU box folder
- Exercise: Data-driven understanding of the jet-stream fluctuations (instructions and data). All three documents (two pdf and one gif) available in a UU box folder
- Exercise: EDIPI predictability training with qgs (instructions and data). All documents (pdf and NC) available in a UU box folder
- Patrick Ludwig (2023). Introduction to ICON. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Stefanie Feuerstein (2023). Extreme weather and climate change a reinsurance perspective (Allianz). Available in UU box (pdf)
- Reto Schneider (2023). Impact of weather events on agricultural production Insurability and prediction approach (Allianz). Available in UU box (UU)
- Magdalena Vallon (2023). The Climate Game of the South German Climate Office. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Hans Schipper (2023): The South German Climate Office An example of regional climate communication. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Alexandros Giorgiadis (2023). Catastrophe modelling for beginners: Research & Development in the insurance industry (Aon Impact Forecasting). Available in UU box (pdf)
- Michael Kunz (2023). CEDIM at a glance or better understanding hazards and risk. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Hugo Rakotoarimanga (2023). Natural Events Risk modelling at AXA. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Sakıp Murat Yalçın & Eleni Zenonos (2024). Building Peer Support Networks. Available in UU box (pdf)
- Joan Ballester (2024). Proposal Writing Available in UU box (zip)
- Nili Harnik(2024). Presentation Skills Available in UU box (zip)
- Sakıp Murat Yalçın (2024). Time Management Available in UU box (zip)
- Eleni Zenonos (2024). Communication Skills Available in UU box (zip)
- Nili Harnik (2024). The importance of “Why” Available in UU box (zip)
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Deliverables related to publications
- D8.5 – Frontiers for young minds paper draft & EGU blogs:
- EGU Climate Blog – “Simple is good: How we understand climate using idealised models” by Anupama K Xavier, Oisin Hamilton and Stéphane Vannitsem. Blog post available on EGU’s homepage.
- Frontiers for young minds draft on “Predicting the future: how does a weather forecast work” by Emma Allwright, Gabriele Messori and Christoffer Hallgren. Available soon.
- EGU Nonlinear Processes in Geosciences Blog: “Changes in the climate dynamics have already modified characteristics and impacts of storms in France: the case study of storm Alex 2020” by Mireia Ginesta-Fernández. Blog post available at EGU’s webpage
- EGU Nonlinear Processes in Geosciences Blog: “The link between European warm-temperature extremes and atmospheric persistence” by Emma Holmberg (neé Allwright). Blog post available at EGU’s webpage
- D5.1 Working drafts of the first research papers by the individual ESRs and co-authors participating in WP5.
Available in UU box (pdf) - D5.2 Working drafts of the second research papers by the individual ESRs and co-authors participating in WP5
Available in UU box (pdf) - D6.1 Working drafts of the first research papers by the individual ESRs and co-authors participating in WP6.
Available in UU box (pdf) - D6.2 Working drafts of the second research papers by the individual ESRs and co-authors participating in WP6.
Available in UU box (pdf) - D7.1 Working drafts of the first research papers by the individual ESRs and co-authors participating in WP7.
Available in UU box (pdf) - D7.2 Working drafts of the first research papers by the individual ESRs and co-authors participating in WP7.
Available in UU box (pdf)
Milestones (completion date)
- MS1 – Risk Management Plan (20 April 2021)
- MS7 – Kick-off meeting (24 March 2021)
- MS2 – Planned recruitments completed (8 November 2021)
- MS13 – Approved Career Development Plans (7 March 2022)
- MS3 – Project check (13 May 2022)
- MS4 – WP5 Research Contribution (31 October 2022)
Available in box as a pdf - MS5 – WP6 Research Contribution (31 October 2022)
Available in box as a pdf - MS6 – WP7 Research Contribution (31 October 2022)
Available in box as a pdf - MS10 – Coupled ocean-atmosphere simulations with the MAOOAM model (28 March 2023)
A variety of fields from coupled ocean-atmosphere simulations with the MAOOAM model are publicly available at Zenodo webpage - MS11 – Dynamical systems diagnostics for extratropical cyclones (28 March 2023)
The dynamical systems diagnostics developed and applied in the project, aimed at evaluating climate model simulations of extratropical cyclones, are publicly available at this GitHub repository - MS8 – A database of simulations of extremely rare, persistent heat waves for impact studies obtained by using rare event algorithms (4 September 2023)
The data is available upon request to EDIPI project members and stored at Laboratoire de Physique (CNRS). Three sets of simulations have been performed: 1) a control ensemble of 10 simulations of 100 years each; 2) a set of 10 experiments where the rare event algorithm is designed to select for heatwaves over France. Each experiment consists of an ensemble simulation with 100 ensemble members; 3) the same as 2), but with with the rare event algorithm set to select trajectories leading to heatwaves over Scandinavia. - MS9 – Hierarchy of simulations with the DYNAMICO model (29 January 2023)
Simulations at 3 different spatial resolutions are now publicly available through an FTP server hosted by the CNRS (https://www.lmd.ens.fr/griviere/files/), together with a readme file detailing the content of the files.