TOOL
PROVIDE Climate Risk Dashboard
- Geographical scope:Cities - Global
- Initial Release:2020
- Institution(s):Leader: Climate Analytics Contributor: PROVIDE Consortium Project lead: Carl-Friedrich Schleussner Tool development lead: Quentin Lejeune Data analysis and back-end development: Andyara Callegare (lead), Shruti Nath, Niklas Schwind, Peter Pfleiderer User engagement and testing: Inga Menke (lead), Sylvia Schmidt, Burcu Yesil Design and web development: Jonas Parnow and Flavio Gortana Modelling: Robin Lamboll (Imperial College London), Joeri Rogelj (Imperial College London), Jonas Schwaab (ETH Zürich), Sonia Seneviratne (ETH Zürich)
- Users:Climate Scientists, Climate Risks Experts, Climate Litigation Experts, Science Communicators, National and Local Policy Makers, Urban Planners, Climate Adaptation Experts
- Link:https://climate-risk-dashboard.climateanalytics.org/
- Contact:Climate Analytics
- Contact e-mail:climate.risk.dashboard@climateanalytics.org
The PROVIDE Climate Risk Dashboard is an interactive online tool providing detailed information on different future global warming scenarios and expected impacts on the climate, natural, and human systems. It allows users to explore future climate change impacts and (un)avoidable risks from cities to the global scale. The tool has been updated to see how different levels of climate action will also impact cities and marine environments.
It is possible to start local and explore what action is needed on climate to avoid climate impacts in your city.
The Tool now covers:
- Terrestrial Climate Data for most countries in the world
- Marine Climate Data for most countries with access to the sea in the world
- Urban Climate Data for 140 cities around the world
The tool allows to either explore Future Climate Impacts and see how they will affect the environment and people under different emission scenarios, or how to avoid reaching undesirable climate impact levels in urban areas, suggesting desirable climate action pathways to adopt.
More data on cryosphere loss, permafrost melt, agriculture, economic loss etc., is planned to be added later.