--- - attrs: Abstract: 'Climate change impact assessments often apply models of individual sectors such as agriculture, forestry and water use without considering interactions between these sectors. This is likely to lead to misrepresentation of impacts, and consequently to poor decisions about climate adaptation. However, no published research assesses the differences between impacts simulated by single-sector and integrated models. Here we compare 14 indicators derived from a set of impact models run within single-sector and integrated frameworks across a range of climate and socio-economic scenarios in Europe. We show that single-sector studies misrepresent the spatial pattern, direction and magnitude of most impacts because they omit the complex interdependencies within human and environmental systems. The discrepancies are particularly pronounced for indicators such as food production and water exploitation, which are highly influenced by other sectors through changes in demand, land suitability and resource competition. Furthermore, the discrepancies are greater under different socio-economic scenarios than different climate scenarios, and at the sub-regional rather than Europe-wide scale.' Author: 'Harrison, Paula A.; Dunford, Robert W.; Holman, Ian P.; Rounsevell, Mark D. A.' DOI: 10.1038/nclimate3039 Date: 09//print ISSN: 1758-678X Issue: 9 Journal: Nature Climate Change Pages: 885-890 Publisher: Nature Publishing Group Title: Climate change impact modelling needs to include cross-sectoral interactions Type of Article: Article Volume: 6 Year: 2016 _record_number: 21434 _uuid: 2a131189-94cc-4c86-bb51-2fc0bf6a4504 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1038/nclimate3039 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/2a131189-94cc-4c86-bb51-2fc0bf6a4504.yaml identifier: 2a131189-94cc-4c86-bb51-2fc0bf6a4504 uri: /reference/2a131189-94cc-4c86-bb51-2fc0bf6a4504 - attrs: Abstract: 'The USGS Multihazards Project is working with numerous agencies to evaluate and plan for hazards and damages that could be caused by extreme winter storms impacting California. Atmospheric and hydrological aspects of a hypothetical storm scenario have been quantified as a basis for estimation of human, infrastructure, economic, and environmental impacts for emergency-preparedness and flood-planning exercises. In order to ensure scientific defensibility and necessary levels of detail in the scenario description, selected historical storm episodes were concatentated to describe a rapid arrival of several major storms over the state, yielding precipitation totals and runoff rates beyond those occurring during the individual historical storms. This concatenation allowed the scenario designers to avoid arbitrary scalings and is based on historical occasions from the 19th and 20th Centuries when storms have stalled over the state and when extreme storms have arrived in rapid succession. Dynamically consistent, hourly precipitation, temperatures, barometric pressures (for consideration of storm surges and coastal erosion), and winds over California were developed for the so-called ARkStorm scenario by downscaling the concatenated global records of the historical storm sequences onto 6- and 2-km grids using a regional weather model of January 1969 and February 1986 storm conditions. The weather model outputs were then used to force a hydrologic model to simulate ARkStorm runoff, to better understand resulting flooding risks. Methods used to build this scenario can be applied to other emergency, nonemergency and non-California applications.' Author: 'Dettinger, Michael D.; Martin Ralph, F.; Hughes, Mimi; Das, Tapash; Neiman, Paul; Cox, Dale; Estes, Gary; Reynolds, David; Hartman, Robert; Cayan, Daniel; Jones, Lucy' DOI: 10.1007/s11069-011-9894-5 Date: February 01 ISSN: 1573-0840 Issue: 3 Journal: Natural Hazards Pages: 1085-1111 Title: Design and quantification of an extreme winter storm scenario for emergency preparedness and planning exercises in California Type of Article: journal article Volume: 60 Year: 2012 _record_number: 21450 _uuid: 2a93c37c-fb44-4772-9f9d-3941fc377072 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s11069-011-9894-5 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/2a93c37c-fb44-4772-9f9d-3941fc377072.yaml identifier: 2a93c37c-fb44-4772-9f9d-3941fc377072 uri: /reference/2a93c37c-fb44-4772-9f9d-3941fc377072 - attrs: Author: 'Phillips, Robert A.; Schwartz, Roberta L.; McKeon, William F.; Boom, Marc L.' Last Update Date: October 25 Publisher: NEJM Group Title of Entry: 'Lessons in leadership: How the world’s largest medical center braced for Hurricane Harvey' Title of WebLog: NEJM Catalyst URL: https://catalyst.nejm.org/lessons-leadership-texas-medical-center-hurricane-harvey/ Year: 2017 _record_number: 25306 _uuid: 352c6342-f185-4370-81b4-60ad59f1baa0 reftype: Blog child_publication: /webpage/f2588206-1c60-4586-af85-5bbaad08fc7d href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/352c6342-f185-4370-81b4-60ad59f1baa0.yaml identifier: 352c6342-f185-4370-81b4-60ad59f1baa0 uri: /reference/352c6342-f185-4370-81b4-60ad59f1baa0 - attrs: Abstract: 'Consideration of water supply in transmission expansion planning (TEP) provides a valuable means of managing impacts of thermoelectric generation on limited water resources. Toward this opportunity, thermoelectric water intensity factors and water supply availability (fresh and non-fresh sources) were incorporated into a recent TEP exercise conducted for the electric interconnection in the Western United States. The goal was to inform the placement of new thermoelectric generation so as to minimize issues related to water availability. Although freshwater availability is limited in the West, few instances across five TEP planning scenarios were encountered where water availability impacted the development of new generation. This unexpected result was related to planning decisions that favored the development of low water use generation that was geographically dispersed across the West. These planning decisions were not made because of their favorable influence on thermoelectric water demand; rather, on the basis of assumed future fuel and technology costs, policy drivers and the topology of electricity demand. Results also projected that interconnection-wide thermoelectric water consumption would increase by 31% under the business-as-usual case, while consumption would decrease by 42% under a scenario assuming a low-carbon future. Except in a few instances, new thermoelectric water consumption could be accommodated with less than 10% of the local available water supply; however, limited freshwater supplies and state-level policies could increase use of non-fresh water sources for new thermoelectric generation. Results could have been considerably different if scenarios favoring higher-intensity water use generation technology or potential impacts of climate change had been explored. Conduct of this exercise highlighted the importance of integrating water into all phases of TEP, particularly joint management of decisions that are both directly (e.g., water availability constraint) and indirectly (technology or policy constraints) related to future thermoelectric water demand, as well as, the careful selection of scenarios that adequately bound the potential dimensions of water impact.' Author: 'Tidwell, Vincent C.; Michael Bailey; Katie M. Zemlick; Barbara D. Moreland' DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/11/12/124001 ISSN: 1748-9326 Issue: 12 Journal: Environmental Research Letters Pages: 124001 Title: Water supply as a constraint on transmission expansion planning in the Western interconnection Volume: 11 Year: 2016 _record_number: 25281 _uuid: 384a5db4-d03c-496f-9de5-af594c199715 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1088/1748-9326/11/12/124001 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/384a5db4-d03c-496f-9de5-af594c199715.yaml identifier: 384a5db4-d03c-496f-9de5-af594c199715 uri: /reference/384a5db4-d03c-496f-9de5-af594c199715 - attrs: Author: 'Dawson, Richard J.' DOI: 10.3390/cli3041079 ISSN: 2225-1154 Issue: 4 Journal: Climate Pages: 1079-1096 Title: Handling interdependencies in climate change risk assessment Volume: 3 Year: 2015 _record_number: 23013 _uuid: 38a397d4-812d-4af6-98fb-8f74dd8632ac reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.3390/cli3041079 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/38a397d4-812d-4af6-98fb-8f74dd8632ac.yaml identifier: 38a397d4-812d-4af6-98fb-8f74dd8632ac uri: /reference/38a397d4-812d-4af6-98fb-8f74dd8632ac - attrs: Author: 'Ouyang, Min; Wang, Zhenghua' DOI: 10.1016/j.ress.2015.03.011 Date: 9// ISSN: 0951-8320 Journal: Reliability Engineering & System Safety Keywords: Infrastructure systems; Interdependencies; Resilience assessment; Cascading failures; Restoration; Genetic algorithm Pages: 74-82 Title: 'Resilience assessment of interdependent infrastructure systems: With a focus on joint restoration modeling and analysis' Volume: 141 Year: 2015 _record_number: 21415 _uuid: 3a3f902e-2ac4-4692-a799-5847739302e0 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.ress.2015.03.011 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3a3f902e-2ac4-4692-a799-5847739302e0.yaml identifier: 3a3f902e-2ac4-4692-a799-5847739302e0 uri: /reference/3a3f902e-2ac4-4692-a799-5847739302e0 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Moss, Richard H.; Karen Fisher-Vanden; Alison Delgado; Scott Backhaus; Christopher L. Barrett; Budhendra Bhaduri; Ian P. Kraucunas; Patrick M. Reed; Jennie S. Rice; Ian Sue Wing; Claudia Tebaldi' Institution: U.S. Global Change Research Program Place Published: 'Washington, DC' Title: 'Understanding Dynamics and Resilience in Complex Interdependent Systems: Prospects for a Multi-Model Framework and Community of Practice ' URL: http://www.globalchange.gov/sites/globalchange/files/Multi-Model_Framework_WorkshopReport_Dec_2016_Final.pdf Year: 2016 _record_number: 21420 _uuid: 3b60ac0e-ac78-4058-9d7b-dd70797ac334 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/understanding-dynamics-resilience-complex-interdependent-systems-prospects-multi-model-framework-community-practice href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3b60ac0e-ac78-4058-9d7b-dd70797ac334.yaml identifier: 3b60ac0e-ac78-4058-9d7b-dd70797ac334 uri: /reference/3b60ac0e-ac78-4058-9d7b-dd70797ac334 - attrs: Abstract: 'Policy directives in several nations are focusing on the development of smart cities, linking innovations in the data sciences with the goal of advancing human well-being and sustainability on a highly urbanized planet. To achieve this goal, smart initiatives must move beyond city-level data to a higher-order understanding of cities as transboundary, multisectoral, multiscalar, social-ecological-infrastructural systems with diverse actors, priorities, and solutions. We identify five key dimensions of cities and present eight principles to focus attention on the systems-level decisions that society faces to transition toward a smart, sustainable, and healthy urban future.' Author: 'Ramaswami, Anu; Russell, Armistead G.; Culligan, Patricia J.; Sharma, Karnamadakala Rahul; Kumar, Emani' DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf7160 Issue: 6288 Journal: Science Pages: 940-943 Title: 'Meta-principles for developing smart, sustainable, and healthy cities' Volume: 352 Year: 2016 _record_number: 21408 _uuid: 3e254999-7a58-44f8-9cc8-adfdf88e240f reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1126/science.aaf7160 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3e254999-7a58-44f8-9cc8-adfdf88e240f.yaml identifier: 3e254999-7a58-44f8-9cc8-adfdf88e240f uri: /reference/3e254999-7a58-44f8-9cc8-adfdf88e240f - attrs: Author: 'DeNooyer, Tyler A.; Peschel, Joshua M.; Zhang, Zhenxing; Stillwell, Ashlynn S.' DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2015.10.071 Date: 2016/01/15/ ISSN: 0306-2619 Journal: Applied Energy Keywords: Policy; Power generation; Scenario analysis; Sustainability; Water resources Pages: 363-371 Title: 'Integrating water resources and power generation: The energy–water nexus in Illinois' Volume: 162 Year: 2016 _record_number: 21449 _uuid: 3f3b736d-974d-42a5-939d-c52f515a2b35 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.apenergy.2015.10.071 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3f3b736d-974d-42a5-939d-c52f515a2b35.yaml identifier: 3f3b736d-974d-42a5-939d-c52f515a2b35 uri: /reference/3f3b736d-974d-42a5-939d-c52f515a2b35 - attrs: Author: 'Voisin, N.; Kintner-Meyer, M.; Skaggs, R.; Nguyen, T.; Wu, D.; Dirks, J.; Xie, Y.; Hejazi, M.' DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2016.08.059 Date: 2016/11/15/ ISSN: 0360-5442 Journal: Energy Keywords: Electric grid; Reliability; Water-energy nexus; Inter-annual variability; Production cost model; Hydro-climatology Pages: 1-12 Title: 'Vulnerability of the US western electric grid to hydro-climatological conditions: How bad can it get?' Volume: 115 Year: 2016 _record_number: 25276 _uuid: 3fcff817-d5a8-4aaa-8932-a433d1262798 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.energy.2016.08.059 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3fcff817-d5a8-4aaa-8932-a433d1262798.yaml identifier: 3fcff817-d5a8-4aaa-8932-a433d1262798 uri: /reference/3fcff817-d5a8-4aaa-8932-a433d1262798 - attrs: .reference_type: 1 Author: "Lempert, R.J.\rPopper, S.W.\rBankes, S.C." ISBN: 0833032755 Number of Pages: '186 ' Place Published: 'Santa Monica, CA' Publisher: Rand Corporation Reviewer: 4067a093-f6b2-4083-a52c-9a8b30c45b66 Series Volume: 1626 Title: 'Shaping the Next One Hundred Years: New Methods for Quantitative, Long-Term Policy Analysis' URL: http://www.rand.org/pubs/monograph_reports/2007/MR1626.pdf Year: 2003 _chapter: '["Ch. 26: Decision Support FINAL","RF 12"]' _record_number: 1528 _uuid: 4067a093-f6b2-4083-a52c-9a8b30c45b66 reftype: Book child_publication: /report/rand-mr1626 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/4067a093-f6b2-4083-a52c-9a8b30c45b66.yaml identifier: 4067a093-f6b2-4083-a52c-9a8b30c45b66 uri: /reference/4067a093-f6b2-4083-a52c-9a8b30c45b66 - attrs: Author: 'Korkali, Mert; Veneman, Jason G.; Tivnan, Brian F.; Bagrow, James P.; Hines, Paul D. H.' DOI: 10.1038/srep44499 Date: 03/20/online Journal: Scientific Reports Pages: 44499 Publisher: The Author(s) Title: Reducing cascading failure risk by increasing infrastructure network interdependence Type of Article: Article Volume: 7 Year: 2017 _record_number: 25289 _uuid: 42960847-fc10-4b7c-af30-5b3416b3b9cd reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1038/srep44499 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/42960847-fc10-4b7c-af30-5b3416b3b9cd.yaml identifier: 42960847-fc10-4b7c-af30-5b3416b3b9cd uri: /reference/42960847-fc10-4b7c-af30-5b3416b3b9cd - attrs: Abstract: 'The elicitation of scientific and technical judgments from experts, in the form of subjective probability distributions, can be a valuable addition to other forms of evidence in support of public policy decision making. This paper explores when it is sensible to perform such elicitation and how that can best be done. A number of key issues are discussed, including topics on which there are, and are not, experts who have knowledge that provides a basis for making informed predictive judgments; the inadequacy of only using qualitative uncertainty language; the role of cognitive heuristics and of overconfidence; the choice of experts; the development, refinement, and iterative testing of elicitation protocols that are designed to help experts to consider systematically all relevant knowledge when they make their judgments; the treatment of uncertainty about model functional form; diversity of expert opinion; and when it does or does not make sense to combine judgments from different experts. Although it may be tempting to view expert elicitation as a low-cost, low-effort alternative to conducting serious research and analysis, it is neither. Rather, expert elicitation should build on and use the best available research and analysis and be undertaken only when, given those, the state of knowledge will remain insufficient to support timely informed assessment and decision making.' Author: 'Morgan, M. Granger' DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1319946111 Date: 'May 20, 2014' Issue: 20 Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Pages: 7176-7184 Title: Use (and abuse) of expert elicitation in support of decision making for public policy Volume: 111 Year: 2014 _record_number: 21386 _uuid: 42c619a3-768b-4a22-9dd6-73b52af9426c reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1319946111 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/42c619a3-768b-4a22-9dd6-73b52af9426c.yaml identifier: 42c619a3-768b-4a22-9dd6-73b52af9426c uri: /reference/42c619a3-768b-4a22-9dd6-73b52af9426c - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Bond, Craig A.; Aaron Strong; Nicholas Burger; Sarah Weilant; Uzaib Saya; Anita Chandra' DOI: 10.7249/RR2129 Institution: RAND Corporation Pages: 159 Place Published: 'Santa Monica, CA' Report Number: RR-2129-RF Title: 'Resilience Dividend Valuation Model: Framework Development and Initial Case Studies' URL: https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR2129.html Year: 2017 _record_number: 25307 _uuid: 4716cc4e-32cb-47cd-aa8c-4dded908b214 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/resilience-dividend-valuation-model-framework-development-initial-case-studies href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/4716cc4e-32cb-47cd-aa8c-4dded908b214.yaml identifier: 4716cc4e-32cb-47cd-aa8c-4dded908b214 uri: /reference/4716cc4e-32cb-47cd-aa8c-4dded908b214 - attrs: Abstract: 'Transformation as an adaptive response to climate change opens a range of novel policy options. Used to describe responses that produce non-linear changes in systems or their host social and ecological environments, transformation also raises distinct ethical and procedural questions for decision-makers. Expanding adaptation to include transformation foregrounds questions of power and preference that have so far been underdeveloped in adaptation theory and practice. We build on David Harvey’s notion of activity space to derive a framework and research agenda for climate change adaptation seen as a political decision-point and as an opportunity for transformation, incremental adjustment or resistance to change in development pathway. Decision-making is unpacked through the notion of the activity space into seven coevolving sites: the individual, technology, livelihoods, discourse, behaviour, the environment and institutions. The framework is tested against practitioner priorities to define an agenda that can make coherent advances in research and practice on climate change adaptation.' Author: 'Pelling, Mark; O’Brien, Karen; Matyas, David' DOI: 10.1007/s10584-014-1303-0 Date: November 01 ISSN: 1573-1480 Issue: 1 Journal: Climatic Change Pages: 113-127 Title: Adaptation and transformation Type of Article: journal article Volume: 133 Year: 2015 _record_number: 25286 _uuid: 47e41b82-b7e0-470a-a423-5d9f60aec415 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10584-014-1303-0 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/47e41b82-b7e0-470a-a423-5d9f60aec415.yaml identifier: 47e41b82-b7e0-470a-a423-5d9f60aec415 uri: /reference/47e41b82-b7e0-470a-a423-5d9f60aec415 - attrs: Author: 'Ke, Xinda; Wu, Di; Rice, Jennie; Kintner-Meyer, Michael; Lu, Ning' DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.08.188 Date: 2016/12/01/ ISSN: 0306-2619 Journal: Applied Energy Keywords: Climate change; Heat wave; Power grid operation; Production cost model; Unit commitment Pages: 504-512 Title: Quantifying impacts of heat waves on power grid operation Volume: 183 Year: 2016 _record_number: 25272 _uuid: 4ae24352-4325-4cec-862e-7f8064485d6d reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.08.188 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/4ae24352-4325-4cec-862e-7f8064485d6d.yaml identifier: 4ae24352-4325-4cec-862e-7f8064485d6d uri: /reference/4ae24352-4325-4cec-862e-7f8064485d6d - attrs: Author: 'Hwang, Cheinway; Yang, Yuande; Kao, Ricky; Han, Jiancheng; Shum, C. K.; Galloway, Devin L.; Sneed, Michelle; Hung, Wei-Chia; Cheng, Yung-Sheng; Li, Fei' DOI: 10.1038/srep28160 Date: 06/21/online Journal: Scientific Reports Pages: 28160 Publisher: The Author(s) Title: 'Time-varying land subsidence detected by radar altimetry: California, Taiwan and North China' Type of Article: Article Volume: 6 Year: 2016 _record_number: 21429 _uuid: 4e6aec90-125c-4525-b0d7-ff223b11c887 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1038/srep28160 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/4e6aec90-125c-4525-b0d7-ff223b11c887.yaml identifier: 4e6aec90-125c-4525-b0d7-ff223b11c887 uri: /reference/4e6aec90-125c-4525-b0d7-ff223b11c887 - attrs: .reference_type: 16 Access Date: April 5 Access Year: 2018 Author: 'NPS,' Place Published: Yellowstone National Park Publisher: National Park Service (NPS) Title: 'Wolf Restoration [web page]' URL: https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/wolf-restoration.htm Year: 2017 _record_number: 25302 _uuid: 4f71b796-1b9b-4917-b1e5-d6ff3aa51055 reftype: Web Page child_publication: /webpage/8aa3a7db-53f3-472f-8367-cb3fef4e5a4c href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/4f71b796-1b9b-4917-b1e5-d6ff3aa51055.yaml identifier: 4f71b796-1b9b-4917-b1e5-d6ff3aa51055 uri: /reference/4f71b796-1b9b-4917-b1e5-d6ff3aa51055 - attrs: Author: 'Giordano, Thierry' DOI: 10.1016/j.jup.2012.07.001 Date: 2012/12/01/ ISSN: 0957-1787 Journal: Utilities Policy Keywords: Infrastructure; Climate change; Planning; Uncertainties Pages: 80-89 Title: Adaptive planning for climate resilient long-lived infrastructures Volume: 23 Year: 2012 _record_number: 21438 _uuid: 51081935-d488-42bd-896f-f188b30e951e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jup.2012.07.001 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/51081935-d488-42bd-896f-f188b30e951e.yaml identifier: 51081935-d488-42bd-896f-f188b30e951e uri: /reference/51081935-d488-42bd-896f-f188b30e951e - attrs: Abstract: 'The interactions between natural water availability and societal water demand and management are complex. In response to gaps in empirical research of the adaptive capacity of social and environmental systems to climate stresses, we provide an assessment of responses to water scarcity during a multi-year drought in California. In particular, we use Barnett and O’Neill’s (Global Environ Change 20:211–213, 2010) criteria for maladaptation to examine responses in the agricultural and energy sectors to a multi-year (2007–2009) California drought. We conclude that despite evidence in both sectors of resiliency to the impacts of the drought, some of the coping strategies adopted increased the vulnerability of other systems. These other systems include California’s aquatic ecosystems and social groups that rely on those ecosystems for their health or employment; future generations whose resources were drawn down in the near-term, where otherwise those resources would have been available at a later time; and current and future generations who were, or will be, exposed to the effects of increased greenhouse gas emissions. This case study demonstrates that California’s current strategies for dealing with long or severe droughts are less successful than previously thought when short- and long-term impacts are evaluated together. This finding is particularly relevant given projections of more frequent and severe water shortages in the future due to climate change. This study recommends a shift from crisis-driven responses to the development and enactment of long-term mitigation measures that are anticipatory and focus on comprehensive risk reduction.' Author: 'Christian-Smith, Juliet; Levy, Morgan C.; Gleick, Peter H.' DOI: 10.1007/s11625-014-0269-1 Date: July 01 ISSN: 1862-4057 Issue: 3 Journal: Sustainability Science Pages: 491-501 Title: 'Maladaptation to drought: A case report from California, USA' Type of Article: journal article Volume: 10 Year: 2015 _record_number: 21457 _uuid: 53f0bf93-d4cf-4656-ba6e-2aaf70bd6a0a reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s11625-014-0269-1 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/53f0bf93-d4cf-4656-ba6e-2aaf70bd6a0a.yaml identifier: 53f0bf93-d4cf-4656-ba6e-2aaf70bd6a0a uri: /reference/53f0bf93-d4cf-4656-ba6e-2aaf70bd6a0a - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: "Skaggs, R.\rHibbard, K.\rFrumhoff, Peter\rLowry, Thomas\rMiddleton, Richard\rPate, Ron\rTidwell, Vince\rArnold, Jeffrey\rAvert, Kristen\rJanetos, Anthony\rIzaurralde, Cesar\rRice, Jennie\rRose, Steve" Institution: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Pages: 152 Place Published: 'Richland, Washington' Title: Climate and Energy-Water-Land System Interactions. Technical Report to the U.S. Department of Energy in Support of the National Climate Assessment. PNNL-21185 URL: http://www.pnnl.gov/main/publications/external/technical_reports/PNNL-21185.pdf Year: 2012 _chapter: '["RF 7","Ch. 4: Energy Supply and Use FINAL","Ch. 28: Adaptation FINAL","RF 12","Ch. 10: Energy Water Land FINAL"]' _record_number: 2862 _uuid: 552cc5f5-a7b3-4a64-8bee-98ae0cced150 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/pnnl-21185 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/552cc5f5-a7b3-4a64-8bee-98ae0cced150.yaml identifier: 552cc5f5-a7b3-4a64-8bee-98ae0cced150 uri: /reference/552cc5f5-a7b3-4a64-8bee-98ae0cced150 - attrs: Author: 'Dunn-Cavelty, Myriam; Suter, Manuel' DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcip.2009.08.006 Date: 2009/12/01/ ISSN: 1874-5482 Issue: 4 Journal: International Journal of Critical Infrastructure Protection Keywords: Critical infrastructure protection; Public–Private Partnerships; Governance theory; Meta-governance Pages: 179-187 Title: 'Public–Private Partnerships are no silver bullet: An expanded governance model for Critical Infrastructure Protection' Volume: 2 Year: 2009 _record_number: 21446 _uuid: 57da6191-41b4-48a5-8fe6-0d55fd26a01b reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.ijcip.2009.08.006 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/57da6191-41b4-48a5-8fe6-0d55fd26a01b.yaml identifier: 57da6191-41b4-48a5-8fe6-0d55fd26a01b uri: /reference/57da6191-41b4-48a5-8fe6-0d55fd26a01b - attrs: Abstract: 'The global demand for water and energy is projected to grow, but there likely will be significant constraints in our ability to keep meeting it. These constraints will be imposed partly by the interdependence between water, energy, and climate change. If left unchecked, these connections can exacerbate water and energy shortages and aggravate climate change impacts: Energy is used to supply and treat water; moreover, emissions from energy generation contribute to climate change, which affects water supplies and increases the demand for energy to sustain Earth’s growing population and economy. The linkage between water and energy can offer opportunities for better meeting expected demand while minimizing damage from shortages of either. This article focuses on the technological and engineering aspects of various connections in the water-energy nexus where advancements can enable greater supply of one or both. It also outlines the benefits and challenges associated with each connection. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Environment and Resources Volume 42 is October 17, 2017. Please see ; http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates; for revised estimates.' Author: 'Rao, Prakash; Robert Kostecki; Larry Dale; Ashok Gadgil' DOI: 10.1146/annurev-environ-102016-060959 Issue: 1 Journal: Annual Review of Environment and Resources Pages: 407-437 Title: Technology and engineering of the water-energy nexus Volume: 42 Year: 2017 _record_number: 21407 _uuid: 5c8bfa52-fbc1-46bd-859d-d335cd10da1c reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1146/annurev-environ-102016-060959 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/5c8bfa52-fbc1-46bd-859d-d335cd10da1c.yaml identifier: 5c8bfa52-fbc1-46bd-859d-d335cd10da1c uri: /reference/5c8bfa52-fbc1-46bd-859d-d335cd10da1c - attrs: Author: 'Heeres, Niels; Tillema, Taede; Arts, Jos' DOI: 10.1080/14649357.2016.1193888 Date: 2016/07/02 ISSN: 1464-9357 Issue: 3 Journal: Planning Theory & Practice Pages: 421-443 Publisher: Routledge Title: 'Dealing with interrelatedness and fragmentation in road infrastructure planning: An analysis of integrated approaches throughout the planning process in the Netherlands' Volume: 17 Year: 2016 _record_number: 21433 _uuid: 5e9e38bc-040a-4201-a2c0-62d9916f7089 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1080/14649357.2016.1193888 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/5e9e38bc-040a-4201-a2c0-62d9916f7089.yaml identifier: 5e9e38bc-040a-4201-a2c0-62d9916f7089 uri: /reference/5e9e38bc-040a-4201-a2c0-62d9916f7089