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PublishedOctober 02, 2020

The Integrated Carbon Observing System - ICOS Science Conference 2020

PublishedOctober 02, 2020

The Integrated Carbon Observing System - ICOS Science Conference 2020


The ICOS 2020 Science Conference virtual event has been one of the highlight of the year with its online programme attracting over 900 registered participants. 400 contributions, organised in 17 sessions provided for a rich and comprehensive view on the state-of-art for green-house gas emissions and concentrations monitoring activities.

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ICOS

 

Werner Kutsch (from ICOS Head Office) gave the opening address to the Science Conference, showing a compelling video on the role of CO2 in the Earth system. He introduced Dr. Ana Bastos (from the Max Plank Institute for Biogeochemistry), one of the key scientists behind the REgional Carbon Cycle Assessment and Processes-2 (RECCAP2) project, part of the Global Carbon Project initiatives.

ICOS

 

ICOS

 



ICOS Science Conference

Keynotes highlights included the presentation of Rona Thompson (from NILU) illustrating the CO2 Net Ecosystem Exchange in Europe during the 2018 Drought (recently published). This study and several others illustrate how water cycle anomalies are intertwined with the carbon cycle and will require high accuracy for both the natural and anthropogenic components. The talk of Erik Anderson (from the European Commission Directorate-General for Defence Industry and Space - DG-DEFIS) presented how Copernicus moves forward with monitoring human carbon dioxide emissions with particular emphasis on the role of in-situ observations, such as those coordinated within ICOS-ERIC

ICOS

Thomas Lauvaux (from LSCE) illustrated how  constraining continental carbon exchanges using atmospheric greenhouse gas mixing ratios will permit to reduce uncertainty, a topic which will be further explored in the follow-on of CHE, the CoCO2 project starting in January 2021.

Several of the leading scientist coordinating CHE work-packages actively contributed to the conference (below Dominik Brunner (from EMPA), Maarten Krol (from WUR) and Marko Scholze (from ULund)). They will also be among key actors in CoCO2 project, for the definition of the multi-scale (global-regional-local) CO2 monitoring prototype, which is on-track for 2023.

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ICOS

 

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CHE project work featured also in orals & posters presentations as detailed below:

From All of the CHE project we wish to congratulate our ICOS colleagues for organising an impressive science conference online, that has been also trending in social media #ICOS2020SC!