World Climate Research Programme: Difference between revisions

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The '''World Climate Research Programme''' (WCRP) was established in 1980, under the joint sponsorship of [[International Council for Science]] and the [[World Meteorological Organization]], and has also been sponsored by the [[Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission]] of [[UNESCO]] since 1993. It is a component of the [[World Climate Programme]]. The objectives of the programme are to develop the fundamental scientific understanding of the physical [[climate]] system and climate processes needed to determine to what extent climate can be predicted and the extent of human influence on climate. The programme encompasses studies of the [[Earth's atmosphere|global atmosphere]], [[ocean]]s, [[sea ice]], land ice (such as [[glacier]]s, [[ice cap]]s and [[ice sheet]]s), and the land surface which together constitute the Earth's physical climate system.
 
WCRP activities address issues of scientific uncertainty in the Earth's climate system including transport and storage of heat by the ocean, the global energy and [[Water cycle|hydrological cycle]], the formation of [[clouds]] and their effects on radiative transfer, and the role of the [[cryosphere]] in climate. These activities match the scientific priorities identified by the [[Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change]], and provide the basis for responding to issues raised in the [[United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change]]. WCRP also lays the scientific foundation for meeting the research challenges posed in Agenda 21. Together with the [[International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme]] and the [[International Human Dimensions of Global Environmental Change Programme]], WCRP provides the international framework for scientific cooperation in the study of global [[climate change]]./[[global warming]]
 
Scientific guidance for the programme is provided by a Joint Scientific Committee consisting of 18 scientists selected by mutual agreement between the three sponsoring organizations.