Dear Ratna-san,

I just forwarded your email to colleagues within cordex sea. Hopefully some would be interested to join. We'll be submitting some soon.

Best regards -- Fred

On Mon, Jan 30, 2017 at 11:29 AM, Satyaban B. Ratna <satyaban@jamstec.go.jp> wrote:
Dear Colleague,

We are convening the following session (AS31) in the upcoming AOGS Conference to be held during 6 - 11 August, 2017 in Singapore. Considering your expertise in the topic we invite you to submit your abstracts to this session. We will also appreciate if you could kindly circulate this information among your colleagues interested in this session.

AS 31: Regional Climate Downscaling and CORDEX: Challenges and Prospects

There have been significant efforts for a few decades on regional downscaling to aim for producing regional and/or local climate projection as well as expanding scientific understanding on climate processes. In this context, a recent WCRP major project, Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) provides a common framework that consists of 14 continental-scale domains, in which four initiatives belongs to Australasia: CORDEX-South Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Australia. This region needs to be considered with caution and in- depth, both in geographical and climatological perspectives, because it covers very unique and complex climatological phenomena. These include: the most complex orography with the highest plateau in the world; the strongest monsoon areas including Indian, East Asian, Northwest Pacific, and Australian monsoons; the strongest convection in the tropical maritime continents; the strongest tropical cyclones activities; and even both the northern and southern Hemisphere. Despite of the successful achievements made by CORDEX-Asia communities, we still need many issues to be addressed such as coupling ocean-atmosphere, climate-vegetation, climate-aerosols, and other climate processes. In addition, statistical/empirical regional climate downscaling approaches have received increasing attention by stakeholders in the regions. Hence, this session invites scientists within and outside the CORDEX initiatives to share their scientific findings on various issues related to dynamical and statistical/empirical regional climate downscaling methods. This session covers following themes: 1) Evaluation of regional downscaling techniques (dynamical and statistical methods), 2) Development of coupled regional climate model, 3) Added-values in regional climate downscaling by comparison with high-quality observation datasets, 4) Process-based studies on sensitivity to the large-scale forcing, regional forcing, domain size, resolution, physics, and etc., 5) Regional climate projection and understanding on climate sensitivity, and finally 6) Other issues relevant to regional climate downscaling including application to application sectors.

The abstract submission extended deadline: 15 February 2017

http://www.asiaoceania.org/aogs2017/public.asp?page=abstract.htm

Conveners: Hyun-Suk Kang (Korea Meteorological Administration), Satyaban B. Ratna (JAMSTEC, Japan), Fredolin T. Tangang (National University of Malaysia), Xianxiang Li (SMART, Singapore), Jason Evans (University of New South Wales, Australia)

Thanks.
Best regards
Satyaban B. Ratna

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Dr. Satyaban Bishoyi Ratna
CVPARG/Application Laboratory/JAMSTEC
3173-25 Showa-machi, Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama
Kanagawa, 236-0001, Japan
Email: satyaban@jamstec.go.jp
Tel: +81-45-778-5515
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Fredolin Tangang, PhD

Professor,
School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences
Faculty of Science and Technology
Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 
(The National University of Malaysia)
43600 Bangi Selangor
MALAYSIA
Phn: +603-89214943 / +6019-2718986
Fax: +603-89253357

Adjunct Professor,
Ramkhamhaeng University Center of Regional Climate Change and Renewable Energy (RU-CORE),
Ramkhamhaeng University, Bangkok, Thailand

Fellow (FASc), Academy of Sciences Malaysia 
Coordinator, SEACLID/CORDEX Southeast Asia
(http://www.ukm.edu.my/seaclid-cordex/)