EGU25-5233, updated on 14 Mar 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-5233
EGU General Assembly 2025
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Thursday, 01 May, 15:15–15:25 (CEST)
 
Room 0.49/50
Standardisation of equitable climate services by supporting a community of practice
Francisco Doblas-Reyes1, Asun Lera St Clair2, Marina Baldissera Pacchetti3, Paula Checchia4, Joerg Cortekar5, Judith E.M. Klostermann6, Werner Krauß7, Angel Muñoz4, Jaroslav Mysiak8, Jorge Paz9, Marta Terrado4, Andreas Villwock5, Mirjana Volarev10, and Saioa Zorita9
Francisco Doblas-Reyes et al.
  • 1ICREA and Barcelona Supercomputing Center
  • 2Barcelona Supercomputing Center and DNV, Oslo, Norway
  • 3Earth Sciences Department, Barcelona Supercomputing Center and Department of Science, Technology, Engineering and Public Policy, University College London
  • 4Barcelona Supercomputing Center
  • 5Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS) at Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon, Hamburg, Germany
  • 6Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, Netherlands
  • 7artec Sustainability Research Center, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany
  • 8CMCC Foundation - Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change, Venice, Italy
  • 9TECNALIA, Basque Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA), Bizkaia, Spain
  • 10Centre for the Promotion of Science, Belgrade, Serbia

Climate services are essential to support climate-sensitive decision making, enabling adaptation to climate change and variability, and mitigate the sources of anthropogenic climate change, while considering the values and contexts of those involved. The unregulated nature of climate services can lead to low market performance and lack of quality assurance. Best practices, guidance, and standards serve as a form of governance, ensuring quality, legitimacy, and relevance of climate services. The Climateurope2 project (www.climateurope2.eu) addresses this gap by engaging and supporting an equitable and diverse community of climate services to provide recommendations for their standardisation. Four components of climate services are identified (the decision context, the ecosystem of actors and co-production processes, the multiple knowledge systems involved, and the delivery and evaluation of these services) to facilitate analysis. This has resulted in the identification of nine key messages summarising the susceptibility for the climate services standardisation. The recommendations are shared with relevant standardisation bodies and actors as well as with climate services stakeholders and providers.

How to cite: Doblas-Reyes, F., Lera St Clair, A., Baldissera Pacchetti, M., Checchia, P., Cortekar, J., Klostermann, J. E. M., Krauß, W., Muñoz, A., Mysiak, J., Paz, J., Terrado, M., Villwock, A., Volarev, M., and Zorita, S.: Standardisation of equitable climate services by supporting a community of practice, EGU General Assembly 2025, Vienna, Austria, 27 Apr–2 May 2025, EGU25-5233, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-5233, 2025.