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Subcommittee on Global Change Research
Committee on
Environment and Natural Resources (CENR).
National Science and
Technology Council (NSTC).
Abstract
The interagency Subcommittee on Global Change Research, which coordinates
implementation of the U.S. Global Change Research Program and the Office
of Science and Technology Policy began work on the first national assessment
of the potential consequences of climate change for the U.S. in early
1997. The effort has included approximately twenty regional workshops;
an intensive two-week summer study; a National Forum; extensive discussions
among Federal Agencies, the scientific community, and a wide variety
of stakeholders; and the establishment of an advisory committee named
the National Assessment Synthesis Team (NAST), chartered through the
National Science Foundation. This document is the National Assessment
Plan developed by the NAST. It has been reviewed and approved by the
Subcommittee on Global Change Research, the Committee on Environment
and Natural Resources, and the National Science and Technology Council.
The purpose of the Plan is to describe the assessment process and to
set out a timetable of activities. Key aspects include the goal and
architecture of the assessment; management strategy; expected outputs;
templates for national, regional, and sectoral analyses; the review
process; and outreach activities.
- Introduction
Climate variability and change now and in the future pose both challenges
and opportunities for our Nation. To be better prepared, the United
States has developed a national assessment process to analyze and evaluate
what is known about the potential consequences of climate variability
and change for the Nation, in the context of other pressures on the
public, the environment, and the Nation's resources. Activities have
been established to assess the risks and opportunities for the United
States--its people, its environment, and its economy--associated with
climate variability and climate change. The national assessment process
will involve a broad spectrum of stakeholders from state, local, tribal,
and Federal governments; business; labor; academia; non-profit organizations;
and the general public. The assessment will link research by scientists
to specific needs of the stakeholders; and will provide planners, managers,
organizations, and the public with the information needed to increase
resilience to climate variability and cope with climate change. It is
founded on the principles of scientific excellence and openness, and
will be integrative and iterative.
The assessment will take place under the auspices of the US Global
Change Research Program (USGCRP), which is mandated by statute with
the responsibility to undertake scientific assessments of the potential
consequences of global change for the United States. The "Global Change
Research Act of 1990" (P.L. 101-606) states that the Federal government
"shall prepare and submit to the President and the Congress an
assessment which--
- integrates, evaluates, and interprets the findings of the Program
and discusses the scientific uncertainties associated with such
findings;
- analyzes the effects of global change on the natural environment,
agriculture, energy production and use, land and water resources,
transportation, human health and welfare, human social systems,
and biological diversity; and
- analyzes current trends in global change, both human-inducted
and natural, and projects major trends for the subsequent 25 to
100 years."
During the past year, the interagency Subcommittee on Global Change
Research (SGCR), which coordinates implementation of the USGCRP, in
cooperation with the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP),
has engaged in a comprehensive planning effort to implement the national
assessment process. This effort has included regional workshops; an
intensive two-week summer study; a National Forum; and extensive discussions
among Federal agencies, the scientific community, and the stakeholder
communities. The planning effort has led to the establishment of a Federally
established advisory committee named the National Assessment Synthesis
Team (NAST), chartered through the National Science Foundation, and
the interagency National Assessment Working Group to work on behalf
of the SGCR (SGCR/NAWG). This document is the plan that has been developed
for the National Assessment by the NAST in close consultation with the
SGCR/NAWG and has also been reviewed and approved by the Committee on
Environment and Natural Resources, the National Science and Technology
Council, and the OSTP.
The purposes of the plan are to describe key aspects of the assessment
process and to set out a timetable of activities. The key aspects include
the goal and architecture of the assessment; management strategy; outputs;
templates for national, regional, and sectoral analyses; the review
process; the schedule; and outreach.
- Goal and Architecture of the National Assessment Process
The overall goal of the National Assessment is to analyze and evaluate
what is known about the potential consequences of climate variability
and change for the Nation in the context of other pressures on the public,
the environment, and the Nation's resources. Analysis and evaluation
will be derived from the extant scientific literature and from new studies
done specifically in support of the national assessment process. The
national assessment process will be guided by a short list of questions
such as the following:
- What are the current environmental stresses and issues for the
United States that will form a backdrop for potential additional impacts
of climate change?
- How might climate variability and change exacerbate or ameliorate
existing problems?
- What are the priority research and information needs that can better
prepare policy makers to reach wise decisions related to climate variability
and change?
- What research is most important to complete over the short term?
Over the long term?
- What coping options exist that can build resilience to current
environmental stresses, and also possibly lessen the impacts of climate
change?
The overall assessment effort will have three major components:
- National synthesis. This will draw together the results of regional
workshops and/or analyses and sectoral analyses of the potential consequences
of climate variability and change. In addition, the synthesis effort
will involve new analyses as are needed and feasible. It will be national
in scope.
- Sectoral analyses. These analyses will consider potential consequences
of climate variability and change on major economic sectors such as
agriculture, "environmental sectors" such as the coastal zone, and
"societal sectors" such as human health. These analyses will be quantitative
and national in scope.
- Regional analyses. Regional workshops and analyses will identify
and characterize potential consequences of climate variability and
change for selected geographic regions. These analyses will be performed
by teams comprised of experts from both public and private sectors
and the spectrum of stakeholder communities.
The National Assessment will emphasize the potential consequences over
the next 25-30 years, and also over the next 100 years. All regional,
sectoral and synthesis analyses will use a common set of scenarios for
climate change and changes in socio-economic conditions. The use of
common scenarios across all analyses will facilitate synthesis. Analyses
of potential consequences over the next 100 years will need to consider
the potential for significant secular changes in climate, potentially
accompanied by changes in climate variability and the frequency of extreme
events, as well as the projected large changes in atmospheric carbon
dioxide concentrations. Over this time frame, coping technologies and
practices can also be expected to change, so some provision must be
made in the analyses for these considerations. Analyses of potential
consequences over the next 25-30 years will need to consider that atmospheric
carbon dioxide concentrations will certainly continue to rise, and there
may be modest, but observable, trends in climate. Potential consequences
over both short and long time frames will need to consider the possibility
of non-linear and threshold responses.
- Management of the National Assessment Process
The parent body within the US Government for the National Assessment
is the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources (CENR), which
is a subsidiary body of the National Science and Technology Council,
chaired by the President. The CENR has delegated responsibility for
oversight of assessment activities to its Subcommittee on Global Change
Research (SGCR), which is the parent committee for the USGCRP. The SGCR
has broad responsibilities for research planning and coordination among
the Federal agencies. With respect to the National Assessment, the SGCR
has been charged with overall coordination, implementation, and sponsorship
of the national assessment process. The letter from the White House
to the chair of the SGCR assigning this responsibility is included as
Appendix 1. The Terms of Reference developed by the SGCR
for the NAST are included as Appendix 2.
Specific responsibilities have been defined for oversight of the three
major components of the National Assessment and for coordination activities
(see also charges to the various entities and other expanded statements
of roles and responsibilities). The National Assessment is envisioned
as a broad-based process that includes structured interaction with a
range of regional and sectoral experts and stakeholders.
The NAST is to provide overall intellectual oversight of the national
assessment process and has specific responsibility for the National
Assessment Synthesis Report, for defining national scenarios, for providing
advice and oversight of the sectoral analyses, and for recommending
guidelines for the template for the regional analyses. The NAST, a FACA-chartered
committee, is a public-private partnership: its members are drawn from
government, academia, and the private sector. The NAST and the SGCR/NAWG
jointly are charged with producing templates for both regional and sectoral
analyses, to ensure that there is sufficient commonness of purpose that
a final synthesis is possible, while not overly constraining the ability
of the regions to address issues that are of particular importance to
them. The NAST is also specifically charged with preparing this Assessment
Plan, and with recommending a review procedure for the final synthesis
report.
Individual agencies or groups of agencies, in cooperation with the
SGCR/NAWG, have lead responsibility for organizing and sponsoring the
sectoral analyses under the guidelines established by the NAST and SGCR/NAWG.
Each sectoral team will be composed of both public and private participants.
SGCR/NAWG has primary oversight and coordination responsibility for
the regional workshops and analyses. Regional activities will be sponsored
by individual agencies or groups of agencies. To help address issues
and questions that reach across regions (e.g., water resources, ecosystem
migration), an Inter-Regional Forum will be established by the SGCR/NAWG
and will be expected to assist NAST and the sectoral analysis teams
in addressing such issues. The Inter-Regional Forum will consist of
one representative from each region, and will be charged with encouraging
sharing of information, methods, data, and findings across regions.
Logistical support for the assessment process for both the SGCR/NAWG
and the NAST will be provided by the National Assessment Coordination
Office (NACO). As importantly, NACO will serve as a resource for the
regional workshops and analyses that are being sponsored through the
efforts of the individual Federal agencies. NACO is expected to help
provide a framework within which the efforts of large numbers of local,
regional, and Federal participants can interact with the national assessment
process in ways that provide useful insights and results for the National
Synthesis, and to promote development of stakeholder networks that will
develop useful insights for their own purposes, quite apart from any
final National Synthesis.
- Outputs of the National Assessment Process
The outputs of the national assessment process are intended to inform
national and regional policy makers, land and resource managers, public
and private organizations, and the public. The outputs will be based
on the best available scientific information, and must respond to the
issues that have been raised by the broad spectrum of stakeholders.
There are three classes of products that are envisioned from the national
assessment process:
- The National Assessment Synthesis Report. This report will be both
synthesis and summary of sectoral and regional analyses, studies,
and workshops combined with additional quantitative analysis to provide
an integrated National Assessment of the potential consequences of
climate variability and change for the United States. It will be relevant
to the policy decisions that both public and private sectors must
make. The Synthesis Report is not intended to be a paper in the scientific,
peer-reviewed literature, but it will be extensively reviewed (described
below), and will be published by the Federal Government. Preparing
the National Assessment Synthesis Report is the responsibility of
the NAST.
- Sectoral Studies and Analyses. Each sector chosen by the NAST and
the SGCR/NAWG for investigation will be the subject of workshops and
quantitative analyses. This work must consider the implications of
the National Assessment scenarios and be able to stand on its own
merits, as well as contribute to the overall National Assessment Synthesis
Report. Of necessity, the National Assessment Synthesis Report will
be able to communicate only part of the detail that each sectoral
study will generate. Therefore, each sectoral study should result
in a substantive report that will be widely reviewed for its technical
merit through a process agreed to by the NAST and SGCR/NAWG. In addition,
the national assessment process encourages that the contributors to
sectoral studies and analyses take every opportunity to prepare papers
whose ultimate home is in the scientific, peer-reviewed literature.
- Regional Reports and Analyses. At regional levels, the reports
from the individual regional workshops will be published within a
reasonable period of time after appropriate review. In addition, regional
analyses will rely on stakeholder interactions and the National Assessment
set of scenarios as well as other region-specific projections to explore
the implications of climate change and variability on spatial scales
that are the most relevant for many potential stakeholders. These
reports and analyses will also be critical for the overall effort
because the National Assessment Synthesis Report cannot be expected
to represent all the detail inherent in any single regional analysis.
Therefore, each regional analysis should result in a substantive report
that will be widely reviewed for its technical merit and relevance
for regional and national stakeholders. In addition, the national
assessment process encourages the contributors to regional reports
and analyses to take every opportunity to prepare papers whose ultimate
home is in the scientific, peer-reviewed literature.
- Template for the National Synthesis Report
The National Assessment Synthesis Report will identify the potential
consequences of climate variability and change, identify where our knowledge
is sound, and where there are major uncertainties, and draw conclusions
to the extent knowledge allows about the underlying regional and sectoral
sensitivities to the changes one might expect to see, and how those
sensitivities compare to other stresses on the overall system. The National
Assessment Synthesis Report is meant to be targeted at issues of importance
to policy makers in Congress and the Administration, state and local
governments, and decisionmakers in the private sector, where many important
investment decisions must also be made. The Synthesis Report will not
itself be an analysis of alternative policies, but it will provide the
scientific foundation on which policy analyses could be based. It will
be a relatively brief document; in the range of 50 printed pages. In
order to meet these goals, the NAST proposes the following general structure
in Table 1.
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Table 1. Outline of the National Assessment Synthesis
Report
Introduction and Goals (2 pages)
- Background on history of climate variability and change
and projected changes for the future
- Goal statement for this assessment
Methodology (3 pages)
- How scenarios have been used
- Overall design of sectoral and regional analyses
Scenarios: Climate and Environmental/Socioeconomic Trends
(5 pages)
- Historical climatology
- General circulation model output
- Sector and region specific conditions
- Socio-economic scenarios
Results 1: Climate Change and Variability: the next 30
years (15 pages)
- Regional results
- Sectoral results
- National synthesis
Results 2: Climate Change and Variability: the next century
(15 pages)
- Regional results
- Sectoral results
- National synthesis
Analysis: Vulnerability and the Capacity for Coping and
Adaptation in Sectors and Regions (8 pages)
Analysis: Rates and Thresholds of Change (6 pages)
Analysis: Research, Data, and Information Needs (4 pages)
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- Templates for the Sectoral and Regional Assessments
The NAST and SGCR/NAWG have identified five sectors that will be analyzed
and receive emphasis in the Synthesis Report: agriculture, coastal regions,
forestry, human health, and water resources and management.
Sectoral and regional analyses will be conducted using defined scenarios
for climate variability and change, and indications of changes in socio-economic
conditions. Subgroups of the NAST are now working with members of the
SGCR/NAWG to develop the scenarios. With respect to developing scenarios
for climate change, several approaches are being proposed: historical
analyses, climate model simulations, and region- or sector-specific
analyses. An overview of current thinking on the climate and socio-economic
scenarios appears in Box 1. All scenario information
that will be used by the regional and sectoral analytical teams will
be publicly available. The first set of national and regional climatic
scenario data, including both the historical climatology of the US and
the first set of transient model projections will be available to regional
and sectoral investigators by the end of June. A scenario framework
for considering socio-economic conditions has also been provided. The
NAST has distributed to regions and sectors a document describing the
framework in the context of their analyses. Further discussion and refinement
will involve discussions with regional and sectoral leaders and agency
representatives.
Templates for sectoral and regional analyses will be developed in consultation
with the regional and sectoral representatives. Each sectoral and regional
analysis should be responsive to guidance provided by NAST and to the
questions articulated by the Administration in the charge to the National
Assessment Synthesis Team (Appendix 1) as
well as to stakeholder interests and concerns. In addition, each analysis
will also consider at a minimum the climate scenarios developed for
the National Assessment. In many ways, the scenarios are the backbone
for subsequent synthesis and analysis. They will provide a common framework
from which comparisons of potential impacts on regions and sectors can
be derived. Not all analyses can be expected to be comparably detailed
or quantitative. However, even for those analyses that are qualitative,
a common usage of climate scenario information will provide insights
into overall patterns and comparisons that can be obtained no other
way.
Sectoral and regional studies should include the participation of stakeholders
in all aspects of the process. It is possible that additional papers
and analyses by experts will need to be commissioned in order to ensure
that the relevant issues are addressed. The expectation is that sectoral
analyses will be quantitative. Many regions will also have the capacity
and the funding for quantitative analyses. In those cases where quantitative
analysis is possible, for example using ecosystem models to project
potential changes in ecosystem processes and characteristics, the methodology
used will be documented thoroughly.
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Box 1: Overview of Thinking
on National Assessment Scenarios
Scenarios for Climate Variability and Change
With respect to developing scenarios for climate change and
variability to use in estimating the potential consequences
on present and future economic, environmental, and societal
conditions, several approaches will be used:
- A historical climatology of the United States covering
the 20th century will be used to examine the potential
consequences of continuation of past climatic trends and future
occurrence of past climate variations;
- General circulation model simulations extending to 2100
of two types will be used. The first type will be model simulations
that have been carried out assuming a 1% per year increase
in greenhouse gas concentrations, both with and without changes
in aerosol concentration (simulations by the Canadian Climate
Centre and the Hadley Centre are being provided). The second
type will be a set of simulations comparing the climatic response
for Business-as-Usual growth in greenhouse gas concentrations
with the response assuming stabilization of greenhouse gas
concentrations (simulations by the National Center for Atmospheric
Research); and
- Region- or sector-specific scenarios designed to facilitate
analysis of the limits of vulnerability of regions and sectors,
exploring these in relation to plausible future climate conditions.
Socio-economic Scenarios
The approach will involve providing a two-by-two matrix in
which to consider the potential consequences of climate variability
and change. The rows will consider the cases where the impact
of climate changes is high or low for a particular sector or
region when compared with other natural and human impacts that
are occurring in a region. The columns would consider cases
in which changes in a particular region or sector are likely
to have high or low significance in the broad sweep of natural,
social and economic activities in that region.
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- Review Process
Review is critical for establishing the overall credibility and responsiveness
of the national assessment process and its constituent reports. There
are several levels at which review is appropriate: technical peer review,
editorial review, and overall policy-level review before submission
of the National Assessment Synthesis Report to Congress. Because there
are multiple products envisioned for the national assessment process,
review mechanisms are proposed for those products other than the National
Assessment Synthesis Report. The NAST proposes a three-tiered review
process for the National Assessment Synthesis Report. The first level
is technical peer review. At this level, the SGCR will identify, in
conjunction with the NAST, public and private organizations, and the
general public, a list of technical experts from agencies and other
organizations who will be asked to review the draft Synthesis Report
for scientific and technical accuracy and validity. Provisions will
also be made for a general comment period at this stage. The review
procedure will be coordinated by NACO, which will provide a central
distribution and receiving point for written reviews. The NAST will
be responsible for responding to and documenting its response to written
review comments.
The second level of review envisioned for the National Assessment Synthesis
Report is editorial responsiveness. The SGCR will identify a high-level
committee of governmental and non-governmental experts whose responsibility
will be to ensure that the Synthesis Report is appropriately responsive
to its overall charge and that NAST has responded appropriately to the
technical review comments it has received. Of course, should technical
errors remain in the report, this committee will also have the purview
to recommend changes to NAST. Comments will continue to be accepted
during this stage of review as well.
The third level of review for the National Assessment Synthesis Report
is explicitly governmental. Once the first two reviews are complete,
the NAST will submit the National Assessment Synthesis Report for approval
by the CENR/NSTC, as requested in the letter from the White House to
the SGCR (Appendix 1). Because all public
and private participants will already have had the opportunity to comment
on technical issues, and there will already have been an external review
of the responsiveness of the NAST and the Synthesis Report to its charge
and of the responsiveness to the technical peer-review, the CENR/NSTC
review will focus on final acceptance of the report, and whether it
will be transmitted to the Congress.
In addition, it is expected that regional and sectoral teams will involve
stakeholders in the review process as appropriate.
Reviews for other outputs of the national assessment process depend
on the details of the particular output. Sectoral and regional reports
should be widely reviewed as part of the agencies' responsibilities
for sponsoring them, but there is not an anticipation of formal review
at the SGCR/CENR/NSTC levels. Workshop reports should be reviewed by
the Steering Committees of the relevant workshops, if not by the entire
roster of participants. The national assessment process emphasizes scientific
publication of as much of the regional and sectoral work as possible
where normal scientific peer-review processes are envisioned to be sufficient.
In addition, for each product a summary report should be prepared that
is designed to convey assessment findings to land and resource managers
and decision-makers and the general public.
Schedule
The envisioned month-by-month schedule is shown in Table 2 below. This schedule is focused on national activities,
specifically those that are the charge of the National Assessment Synthesis
Team. It is the key schedule which other components of the national
assessment process must take into consideration, in order to determine
which of their products and activities will be ready for incorporation
at the national level by the end of 1999, and which will be available
for future reports.
The schedule is designed to provide ample opportunities for interaction
and iteration between regional and sectoral analytical teams and the
NAST. It is also designed to ensure that there are ample opportunities
for review and input to the final Synthesis Report at all stages of
its development, from topic sentences to full-blown review draft. The
analysis phase, including both sectoral and regional analyses, is slated
to last from mid-1998 through mid-1999, or approximately 1 year. The
writing phase begins concurrently with the early stages of the analytical
phase, in order to ensure that there are sufficient opportunities for
iteration between the National Assessment Synthesis Team and the sectoral
and regional analytical teams. The review phase lasts approximately
4 months (Sept.-Dec. 1999), including Administration review.
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Table 2: Synthesis Schedule and Milestones
- 1998
- January
- Agreement on charge and terms of reference for National
Assessment Synthesis Team
- February
- Organization meeting of NAST
- Planning commences for scenarios, regions, and sectors
- March
- FACA charter approved
- Assessment schedule and work plan drafted for SGCR/CENR/NSTC
review
- SGCR/NAWG completes document on regional responsibilities
- Sector teams identified
- April
- Schedule and plan approved by CENR/NSTC
- First full NAST meeting
- May
- Closure on templates, scenarios
- First climate scenarios delivered using historical
data
- June
- Sectoral studies begin
- Regional studies begin
- Inter-Regional Forum activities underway and continue
through 1999
- July
- Sectoral and regional studies continue
- Materials organized for summer study
- August
- One week NAST meeting in Woods Hole to outline report
and produce topic-sentence draft
- September
- Circulation of topic sentence draft for review to agencies
and to regional and sectoral teams
- Production of working draft
- October
- Preliminary internal NAST review of working draft
- November
- Autumn full meeting of NAST for internal NAST and SGCR/NAWG
review of draft and further revisions
- Climate Forum plus one year: Progress and activities
for coming year and interactions among regional, sectoral,
and synthesis activities
- December
- 1999
- January
- February
- Interim analyses due from sectors and regions
- March
- Incorporate interim results from sectors and regions
- Incorporate interim results from Inter-Regional Forum
- April
- Spring full meeting of NAST to revise working draft
- First draft reports due from sectors and regions
- May
- Revised working draft sent to NAST, SGCR/NAWG
- June
- First synthesis meeting of NAST
- July
- August
- Summer writing session at Woods Hole to finish National
Assessment Synthesis Report
- Drafts shared with SGCR/NAWG, Regions, Sectors
- Federal Register Notice of technical review
- September
- October
- Respond to technical reviews
- Editorial/responsiveness review
- November
- Respond to Editorial/responsiveness review
- CENR/NSTC review
- December
- Respond to CENR/NSTC review
- Report to printer on 20 December
- 2000
- January
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- Outreach and Points of Contact
To foster a public-private partnership in the conduct of the National
Assessment, and to promote the interaction of Federal and non-Federal
participants, the role of public outreach and communications is extremely
important.
The primary responsibility for public outreach and communications will
be shared by the SGCR/NAWG and its regional and sectoral partners. They
will assist in the development of educational material about the national
assessment process, and ensure that the regional cooperators continue
to be able to make their wishes and concerns known at a national level.
The NACO will be responsible for maintaining and distributing minutes
and action items from NAST meetings, and for ensuring that the agencies
and all regional cooperators are informed about national-level decisions
and progress. The agencies that comprise the SGCR/NAWG bear a special
responsibility in this regard, since they have already begun to work
directly with the regions, to ensure that the regional cooperators and
the public are informed about the overall process through web sites,
newsletters, and other similar mechanisms.
The NAST, as a FACA committee, will function in an open manner that
will engender confidence in the entire process on the part of all participants
and stakeholders. The NAST will publicize its meetings and will also
make an effort near the end of calendar 1998, at approximately the first
anniversary of the National Forum on the Consequences of Climate Change
for the Nation, to have a larger, open public meeting that serves to
inform all participants of the progress to date, and to solicit comments
and concerns for mid-course corrections. The NAST will not take the
place of SGCR responsibilities for public outreach and communication.
However, the NAST will participate strongly in partnership with the
SGCR and regional/sectoral teams to communicate the results of all assessment
activities to the public and decisionmakers.
Subsequent to publication of the National Assessment Synthesis Report,
the agencies and members of the NAST should expect to conduct several
presentations in different forums that outline both the results of the
assessment, and the process by which the assessment was performed and
reviewed. Public and private briefings of key people in the Executive
and Legislative branches of the Federal government, as well as State
and local officials, and key decision makers in the private sector will
be an important part of ensuring that the important messages of the
National Assessment are received.
About the National Assessment Synthesis Team
The National Assessment Synthesis Team is a Federal Advisory Committee
that was chartered in 1998 on behalf of the Subcommittee on Global Change
Research under the authority of the National Science Foundation. NAST's
responsibilities are to provide overall leadership and direction of
the National Assessment of the Potential Consequences of Climate Variability
and Change, including to guide the assessment process, to review and
integrate the findings of the regional and sectoral assessment activities
into the overall process, and to prepare a national assessment Synthesis
Report.
To obtain additional information regarding the NAST, contact the
Climate Change Science Program Office at 202-223-6262 (voice).
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