We have achieved the expected goals for the first reporting period:
1. Identifying 8 stakeholder groups
We have identified the key stakeholder groups for which co-design of questions would be carried out (MS4):
- Humanitarian organizations and disaster risk reduction groups
- Insurance, or reinsurance
- Industry (among others water and energy)
- Youth climate groups
- Teachers & educators
- Journalists and knowledge brokers
- Legal professionals
- Weather and climate services
2. Shaping key extreme questions and defining 6 central case studies
Interactions with stakeholders and internal discussions in different groups helped to prioritize six central case studies of the highest relevance:
- Pacific-North American Heatwave in June 2021
- Cold air outbreak in Europe in spring 2021
- Extreme rainfall from convective cells in the Mediterranean
- European Drought/Heatwave 2022, including wildfire risks
- Compound winter cold spell and wind-drought, Tropical Cyclone Irma (Aug-Sept 2017)
3. Designing new tools and approaches for the analysis of extreme events
Several new tools have been developed, to strengthen the use of AI techniques. An important development is the extreme events detection toolbox developed by WP3, a generic tool including a number of supervised learning methods to classify events based on meteorological variables. WP4 has developed several new elements of the suite of tools (in the Tigramite python package) for assessing causality chains in the development of extreme events.
4. Preparing events databases and review of events’ impact data bases, vulnerability & exposure information sources
WP2, WP3 and WP8 have allowed various sources of information to be used in extreme events studies and, further, in applications: an overview of global, publicly available databases that indicate exposure and vulnerability to extreme weather events (WP2); a comprehensive database on climate and impacts by combining information and building upon existing databases (WP3); a strategy to select severe convective events and a list of high precipitation events and floods as well hurricanes, tropical storms and tropical-like cyclones(WP8). WP3 developed an AI-based methodology for predicting maps of ecosystems impacts from remote sensing.
5. Launching the communication on extremes
Communication on extremes was done through the project web site (
https://xaida.eu(si apre in una nuova finestra)) and a series of 6 briefs on extreme events . These briefs have been actively disseminated via social media (particularly Twitter) and have in total received 3470+ unique views. This communication will progressively be enriched with the new methods and their applications.
6. Developing several actions for internal communication and integration across the project
For young scientists and students, a summer school in Trieste took place in June 2022. In addition, we are organizing a continuing series of monthly internal webinars where scientific progress is actively shared. The Trieste summer school was a great success (148 participants, 20 lecturers).