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European seas climate impact prediction through regional models

SEACLIM

Project timeline
Start:
January 2025
Duration:
48 months
End:
December 2028
General Information
SEACLIM aims to provide refined information on future decadal-to-multidecadal changes of the marine environment and related impacts at regional to local scales, fundamental for climate policy and decision making. SEACLIM will leverage on regional ocean models of the
Copernicus Marine Service to enable for the first time the pre-operational prediction of decadal and multi-decadal changes of the marine environment (ocean circulation, waves, sea-ice, biogeochemistry) through coordinated downscaling of the latest global climate models reference simulations (CMIP6). SEACLIM will also advance the understanding of physical and ecosystem processes to further develop regional ocean models. New regional ocean indicators will be developed to assess the ocean state and health over coming decades.
SEACLIM R&I will be performed over three European seas: the northeastern Atlantic, northwest shelf including the North Sea, and the Arctic Ocean, but will be replicable to other regional seas. SEACLIM regional ocean predictions, projections and ocean climate indicators will be integrated in the European Digital Twin of the Ocean, providing it with climate ‘what-if scenarios’. SEACLIM new datasets will be benchmarked in coastal and ocean climate services for targeted policy and decision makers to support climate mitigation and adaptation actions and the blue economy. SEACLIM will co-design its R&I and exchange knowledge with key stakeholders and will bridge the gap between the operational oceanography and climate science research communities, ocean modelling and programmatic frameworks (e.g., Copernicus, WCRP CMIP, CORDEX, CLIVAR, RiFS, WMO, GOOS). A coordinated framework for regional ocean decadal to multi-decadal predictions and their evaluation will be co-developed to build capacity of the regional ocean climate community to produce coordinated simulations and pave the way for the development of a new service line on projected changes of the marine environment in Copernicus Marine.

Main contributions of Hereon to SEACLIM include:

• Co-leading a work package on Coastal and Ocean Climate Services Demonstration (CSD) and leading a task on Mechanisms for skill enhancement
• Development of a regional ocean Climate risk service framework for enhanced coastal management and protection:
• Building and application of regional ocean climate services in coastal areas supporting the Blue Economy coexistence. This service will consider multi-use of marine resources including OWPs, lower-trophic aquaculture in the Southern North Sea
EU-Programme Acronym and Subprogramme AreaHORIZON-CL6-2024-CLIMATE-01-6
Project TypeResearch and Innovation Action (RIA)
Contract NumberGrant Agreement 101180125
Co-ordinatorMERCATOR OCEAN (FR)
Funding for the Project (€) Funding for Hereon (€)
4,499,826349,062
Contact Person at Hereon Dr. Joanna Staneva, Institute of Coastal Systems - Analysis and Modeling, Hydrodynamics and Data Assimilation, KSD, Phone: +49 (0)4152 87-1804
E-mail contact
Worldwide Europe

Participants
Bureau De Recherches Geologiques Et Minieres (FR), Ente Publico Puerteos del Estado Clima Maritimo (ES), Fundacion Instituto De Hidraulica Ambiental De Cantabria (ES), Havforskningsinstituttet (NO), Mercator Ocean (FR), Met Office (UK), National Oceanography Centre (UK), Nologin Oceanic Weather Systems, S.L.U (ES), Stiftelsen Nansen Senter for Fjernmaaling (NO), Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SE), University of Bergen (NO), +ATLANTIC Associacao Para Unlaboratorio Colaborativo Doatlantico (PT)
Last Update: 06. January 2025