Spelling suggestions: "subject:": climate"" "subject:": elimate""
11 |
2024 November 15 - Tennessee Weekly Drought SummaryTennessee Climate Office, East Tennessee State University 15 November 2024 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
12 |
Federal carbon regulation : implications and adaptation strategies for local policymakers in TexasSmeltzer, David Patrick 29 November 2012 (has links)
In the absence of federal climate change initiatives, Texas cities have been free to pursue their own local energy and environmental policy objectives. However, recent trends in federal climate change politics have made it clear that the era of federal inaction on climate change is nearing an end. This report argues that these trends will eventually culminate in a comprehensive regulatory structure with serious implications for the entire energy landscape of Texas. Texas cities that adapt quickly to these new conditions will experience greater success in the new low-carbon economy. Determining which adaptation strategy is appropriate for each city, however, is largely a function of the policy priorities of the city in question. This report identifies four, often conflicting, policy perspectives that influence the development of climate change policy priorities: Environmental Protection, Economic Stability, Peak Oil Production, and Energy Security. It then analyzes these perspectives in order to develop criteria for the proper selection of future energy and environmental policies. Finally, this report examines a variety of proposed policy initiatives to identify strategic options for each perspective and opportunities for mutual gain. / text
|
13 |
ENVIRONMENTAL FLUCTUATIONS ON SOUTH-FACING SLOPES IN THE SANTA CATALINA (ARIZONA) FOOTHILLSHaase, Edward F. January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
|
14 |
Contesting transdisciplinary climate knowledge: a decolonial perspective on the FRACTAL project in Windhoek, NamibiaPelaez, Avila Julia Peláez 06 May 2020 (has links)
Recent trends in sustainability research have particularly propagated transdisciplinary approaches in knowledge production. These new modes of knowledge production seek to deconstruct universalist principles and epistemic authorities from positivist research approaches. The potential of replicating existing power dynamics into these transdisciplinary spaces has, however, not sufficiently been critically questioned yet. This study proposes that transformative change in development of African cities requires a deconstruction of these power dynamics, that current transdisciplinary sustainability research is not yet sufficiently engaging in. To examine the power dynamics, the study applied a decolonial lens in its analysis. In a novel approach to contesting climate knowledge, the study sought to deconstruct the foundational concepts that are operationalised in the transdisciplinary knowledge generation. The analysis focused on tracing assumptions to identify imaginaries, that construct the geopolitical space and condition knowledge politics within a transdisciplinary research programme in Windhoek, Namibia. It further sought to reveal the mechanisms in the programmatic research design that condition epistemic authorities and subjectivities in the collaborative processes. Power dynamics were traceable through imaginaries as well as the evidencing of epistemic authority. Two overarching imaginaries could be traced, which are based in the construction and engagement of the geopolitical space in Windhoek: the imaginary of the social impact and desirable future and the imaginary of the sciencepolicy interface. Both imaginaries were underpinned by the vision of transformation, whose operationalisation revealed to be instrumental in determining the actual transformational potential in contrast to the envisioned one. The analysis indicated the concept of transformation to be an inhibiting factor due to uncontested power dynamics that were replicated in the transdisciplinary space. Epistemic authority was especially evident in connection with the climate information that was generated to inform the knowledge co-production. A contestation of authoritative knowledge was evident with regards to contextualising the information for present and future climates in Windhoek. However, the scientific climate information itself was not questioned for its authority. The conceptual design of the stakeholder engagement revealed to be the main mechanism that created subjectivity. The study concluded with an exploratory section, an ‘epistemic disobedience’, which engages the principle of Walking With that is used by the indigenous activist movement of the Zapatistas in Mexico to create a vision of a new world. Walking With is used to reconstruct a vision of a decolonial approach to generating climate knowledge in an African urban space. This exploration further exemplifies a dimension of decolonial criticism, which is the importance of going beyond deconstruction towards fostering decolonial thinking.
|
15 |
Investigation of the Variability of Extreme Tornado ClimatologyFarney, Tory 11 May 2013 (has links)
Previous tornado climatology research has relied primarily upon means of tornadoes or tornado days. Understanding the variability of tornado days however, will result in a more comprehensive understanding of the climatological distribution of tornadoes. In a changing environment, the extremities of a distribution should change faster than the mean of that distribution. Two methods of analyzing tornado days for predefined areas across the continental United States using the Storm Prediction Center's publication Storm Data from 1950 to 2011 are conducted in this study. Statistical analysis of averages, return periods, and percentiles reveals the variability in the record while consecutive tornado days present an alternative way to assess the seasonal repeatability and to assess risk for historic, multi-day tornado outbreaks. The results of this research will help to better define the traditional “tornado alley” as well as highlight other high-risk locations, especially those with higher interannual variability.
|
16 |
2017 September - Tennessee Monthly Climate ReportTennessee Climate Office, East Tennessee State University 01 September 2017 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
17 |
2017 October - Tennesee Monthly Climate ReportTennessee Climate Office, East Tennessee State University 01 October 2017 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
18 |
2017 November - Tennessee Monthly Climate ReportTennessee Climate Office, East Tennessee State University 01 November 2017 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
19 |
2017 December - Tennessee Monthly Climate ReportTennessee Climate Office, East Tennessee State University 01 December 2017 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
20 |
2018 January - Tennessee Monthly Climate ReportTennessee Climate Office, East Tennessee State University 01 January 2018 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.058 seconds