The GHG-Europe project aims to improve our understanding and capacity for predicting the European terrestrial carbon and greenhouse gas budget.
More than 50 % of the European land surface is used for agricultural and forestry production. Land management directly impacts the terrestrial sources and sinks of greenhouse gases (GHGs).
In the view of climate change it is crucial to know the amount of GHGs released into the atmosphere by anthropogenic activities. But also natural drivers such as climate variability influence the GHG balance of European ecosystems. The attribution of GHG emissions to anthropogenic and natural drivers is the ultimate challenge tackled in the GHG-Europe project and is the precondition to assess the potential for GHG reduction from agriculture and forestry in Europe.
Read more about the project, it's challenges and goals.
GHG-Europe: Integrating Europe's terrestrial climate science
International Innovation, issue December 2011
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PhD in Mediterranean agro‐ecosystems modelling [more]
2 PostDocs in land-atmosphere modelling [more]
PostDoc in Ecosystem Modelling [more]
PhD on GHG emissions from grazed pasture [more]
Conference on Atmospheric Biogeosciences [more]
CH4/N2O Synthesis Workshop [more]
SOM-5: Workshop on Soil & Sediment Organic Matter [more]
FSPM2013 [more]
Hidy D, Barcza Z., et al. (2012) [more]
Scott RL, Serrano-Ortiz P, Domingo F, Hamerlynck EP, Kowalski AS (2012) [more]
Fundingsource: EU (FP7)
EC-contribution: 6.6 Mio.€
Duration: 2010-2013
Consortium: 41 partners, 15 countries
Coordinator: A. Freibauer (vTI)