1993 Report on the U.S. Global Change Research Program
The Subcommittee on Global Change Research manages the U.S.
Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) on behalf of the
Committee on Earth and Environmental Sciences (CEES) [which
has been replaced by the Committee on Environment and Natural
Resources Research (CENR)] and the USGCRP member agencies.
The SGCR meets on a monthly basis. In 1993, the functional
architecture for the organization consisted of four science
working groups (one for each of the major program components
listed below), a working group on International Coordination
and Development, and a task group on Global Change Education.
Policy Goal
The U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) was
conceived to provide the scientific understanding of global
change, and developed to be policy-relevant and hence to
support the timely needs of the United States and, in
cooperation with other nations, to address the scientific
uncertainties related to natural and human-induced changes in
the Earth's environment.
Scientific Goal
The scientific goal of the USGCRP is to gain a predictive
understanding of the interactive physical, geological,
chemical, biological, economic and social processes that
regulate the total Earth system and, hence, help establish a
scientific basis for national and international policy
formulation and decisions relating to natural and human-
induced changes in the global environment and their regional
impacts. The scientific program of the USGCRP addresses
Earth system processes that vary on time scales ranging from
seasonal to many decades, even over several centuries.
Strategic Priorities
The key strategic priorities of the USGCRP are to address
uncertainties important to policy issues, including:
- Determining if human-induced global changes have been
observed;
- Predicting future regional and global changes with
improved levels of confidence;
- Determining the impacts associated with predicted
changes; and
- Assessing likely responses of economic, social, and other
human systems to changing environmental conditions.
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
The projects and program elements of the USGCRP resides with
the participating agencies. The primary responsibility of
the Subcommittee on Global Change Research (SGCR) of the
Committee on Earth and Environmental Sciences (CEES) [now the
CENR] is coordination of total Program development,
integration of scientific elements, and overall program
evaluation and review. In accordance with the provisions of
the Global Change Research Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-606),
specific responsibilities of the CEES [CENR] include: (1)
developing the research plan and overseeing its
implementation; (2) improving cooperation among participating
agencies; (3) providing budgetary advice; (4) working with
non-Federal parties to provide public and peer review of the
program; (5) providing representation at international
meetings on global change research and coordinating U.S.
activities on global change with other international
programs; (6) providing scientific bases for policy
decisions; and (7) providing regular reports on the progress
and needs of the Program. The primary organizational
arrangement within the CEES[CENR]/SGCR is based on four
Program Working Groups, one for each of the four scientific
streams of activity of the program: documenting,
understanding, predicting and assessing global change. The
Office of the USGCRP has been established to support the
coordination of USGCRP program activities across all USGCRP
agencies.
MAJOR PROGRAM COMPONENTS
To fulfill the goals and address the strategic priorities of
the USGCRP, four parallel but interconnected streams of
national and international activity have been developed:
- Observations and Data Management: the establishment of an
integrated, comprehensive, long-term program of Earth
system observations and data management on a global
scale;
- Process Research: the development of a program of focused
studies to improve knowledge of the physical,
geological, chemical, biological, and social processes
that influence and govern Earth system behavior and our
knowledge of the impact of global change on human health
and activities;
- Integrated Modeling and Prediction: the development and
application of integrated conceptual and predictive
Earth system models; and
- Assessments: the documentation and assessment of the
state of scientific knowledge and uncertainties and the
implications of the science of global change to support
national and international policymaking activities over
a broad spectrum of global and regional environmental
issues.
Analyzing Global Change Consequences and Mitigation
Strategies, and on Developing Methodologies for Assessing
Policies and Options for responding to global change.
INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
International global research aspects of the USGCRP are
actively coordinated with those of other countries through a
broad range of international arrangements. U.S. scientists
work directly and very closely with their foreign
counterparts in the planning of specific global change
research programs of the World Climate Research Program
(WCRP), core projects of the International Geosphere-
Biosphere Program (IGBP), and national and international
programs in the human dimensions of global environmental
change. These programs are undertaken in close cooperation
with intergovernmental organizations such as the World
Meteorological Organization (WMO), the Intergovernmental
Oceanographic Commission (IOC) and the United Nations
Environment Program (UNEP). A particular focus in these
efforts is the creation of global change research institutes,
particularly to address regional implications of global
change. The first of these institutes, the Inter-American
Institute (IAI) for Global Change Research, was established
in 1992.
SIGNIFICANT SGCR ACTIVITIES FOR FY93
- The SGCR began to implement an expansion of the scope of
the USGCRP, as requested by John H. Gibbons, Assistant
to the President for Science and Technology, in a memo
to Fred Bernthal dated July 8, 1993. The expansion
includes enhanced research in the areas of socio-
economic impacts/effects studies, mitigation/adaptation
strategies and technologies, environmental biology, and
social and policy sciences.
- The SGCR conducted a review and prioritization of all
USGCRP programs. The prioritization process was
experimental in nature, and resulted in USGCRP agencies
re-evaluating their USGCRP programs in light of the new
areas of emphasis recommended by Gibbons.
- The assessment function of the USGCRP was significantly
enhanced through a series of defining workshops and
meetings designed to promote the development of
integrated assessment tools and mechanisms for improved
communication with the policy community.
- USGCRP research provided policy-relevant information
which served as a scientific underpinning for
development of the Climate Change Action Plan, released
in October by President Clinton.
Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC)
activities. Dr. Robert Watson, SGCR Member, was
selected to serve as a Co-Chair for Working Group II of
the IPCC.
- The SGCR sponsored a summer workshop held by the Office of
Interdisciplinary Earth Sciences (OIES) on the current
understanding of the global carbon cycle. The three
topics studied in depth were "the missing sink," "paleo-
CO2 variations," and "modeling CO2 changes."
- The SGCR sponsored a fall workshop held by the Board on
Global Change of the National Academy of Sciences to
review the current USGCRP programs in selected global
change issues, and make recommendations for long range
scientific research in the issue areas which will help
the USGCRP provide information needed by the policy
community.
- The USGCRP established an Office of the USGCRP, with staff
provided by SGCR agencies, to assist in supporting the
activities of the Subcommittee. The establishment of
this office was announced in the report "FCCSET
Initiatives in the FY 1994 Budget," published in April
1993.
Change Research Information Office (GCRIO), required by
the Global Change Research Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-606).
The GCRIO will facilitate information access to the
global change information holdings of the member SGCR
agencies.
- The SGCR supported the first phase of an education
initiative, project "Earthlink," to support the
development of infrastructure for improving
communication about global change to the public.
- The SGCR sponsored a bilateral U.S. and Japan workshop on
Mitigation and Adaptation Technologies held as the Third
U.S./Japan Workshop on Global Change under the
U.S./Japan Science and Technology Agreement. The
Department of Energy and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture co-chaired and provided financial support
for the workshop.
SGCR FY 1993 REPORTS
Our Changing Planet: The FY 1994 U.S. Global Change
Research Program.
Earthquest, issued quarterly by the Office for
Interdisciplinary Earth Studies, supported by the SGCR.
A Report from the Second U.S./Japan Workshop on Global
Change Research: Environmental Response Technologies
(Mitigation and Adaptation)
1993 Status Report of Focused and Contributing Global
Change Education Activities Among CEES [CENR] Agencies
U.S. Federal Government-Wide Ultraviolet-B (UVB)
Research Activity Status Report: A Working Document.
Last update: 21 July 1994