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2. | | DURAN, H.; LÓPEZ-VILLALOBOS, N.; ALLES, G.; LA MANNA, A.; RAVAGNOLO, O. Development and validation of a mechanistic whole dairy farm model to evaluate farming strategies under grazing conditions in Uruguay. Conference Proceeding. In:18th World IMACS Congress and MODSIM International Congress on Modelling and Simulation: Interfacing Modelling and Simulation with Mathematical and Computational Sciences, Proceedings. Cairns, Australia 13-17 July 2009, p.512-518. 2-s2.0-80053020568 Sponsors: CSIRO, Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute, Griffith University,eWater Cooperative Research Centre, Department of Sustainability and Environment.Biblioteca(s): INIA Las Brujas. |
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3. | | DURAN, H.; ALLES, G.; LA MANNA, A.; RAVAGNOLO, O.; LOPEZ-VILLALOBOS, N. Modelo de simulación de tambos : 1. Consumo de pasturas y suplementos. In: CONGRESO ARGENTINO DE PRODUCCIÓN ANIMAL, 32. 2009. Resúmenes. Malargüe, Mendoza, AR: AAPA, 2009. (Revista Argentina de Producción Animal, v. 29, supl.1, p. 376-377, 2009).Biblioteca(s): INIA La Estanzuela. |
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4. | | DURAN, H.; ALLES, G.; LA MANNA, A.; RAVAGNOLO, O.; LOPEZ-VILLALOBOS, N. Modelo de simulación de tambos: 2. Partición de la energía en la vaca. In: CONGRESO ARGENTINO DE PRODUCCIÓN ANIMAL, 32. 2009. Resúmenes. Malargüe, Mendoza, AR: AAPA, 2009. Revista Argentina de Producción Animal, v. 29, supl.1, p. 377-378, 2009.Biblioteca(s): INIA La Estanzuela. |
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Registro completo
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Biblioteca (s) : |
INIA Las Brujas. |
Fecha actual : |
14/02/2022 |
Actualizado : |
14/02/2022 |
Autor : |
VAUGHAN, C.; DESSAI, S.; HEWITT, C.; BAETHGEN, W.; TERRA, R.; BERTERRETCHE, M. |
Afiliación : |
CATHERINE VAUGHAN, Sustainability Research Institute and ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, United Kingdom; International Research Institute for Climate & Society, Columbia University, United States; SURAJE DESSAI, Sustainability Research Institute and ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, United Kingdom; CHRIS HEWITT, UK Met Office, United Kingdom; WALTER E. BAETHGEN, International Research Institute for Climate & Society, Columbia University, United States; RAFAEL TERRA, Instituto de Mecánica de los Fluidos y Ingeniería Ambiental, Universidad de la Republica, Uruguay; MERCEDES BERTERRETCHE, Ministerio de Ganadería, Agricultura y Pesca, Uruguay. |
Título : |
Creating an enabling environment for investment in climate services: The case of Uruguay's National Agricultural Information System. |
Fecha de publicación : |
2017 |
Fuente / Imprenta : |
Climate Services, 2017, Volume 8, Pages 62-71. OPEN ACCESS. doi: |
ISSN : |
2405-8807 |
DOI : |
10.1016/j.cliser.2017.11.001 |
Idioma : |
Inglés |
Notas : |
Article history: Received 10 July 2017; Received in revised form 20 October 2017; Accepted 2 November 2017; Available online 20 November 2017. |
Contenido : |
ABSTRACT.- Increasingly challenged by climate variability and change, many of the world's governments have turned to climate services as a means to improve decision making and mitigate climate-related risk. While there have been some efforts to evaluate the economic impact of climate services, little is known about the contexts in which investments in climate services have taken place. An understanding of the factors that enable climate service investment is important for the development of climate services at local, national and international levels. This paper addresses this gap by investigating the context in which Uruguay's Ministry of Livestock, Agriculture and Fisheries invested in and developed its National System of Agriculture Information (SNIA), a national-level climate service for the agriculture sector. Using qualitative research methods, the paper uses key documents and 43 interviews to identify six factors that have shaped the decision to invest in the SNIA: (1) Uruguay's focus on sustainable agricultural intensification; (2) previous work on climate change adaptation; (3) the modernization of the meteorological service; (4) the country's open data policy; (5) the government's decision to focus the SNIA on near-term (e.g., seasonal) rather than long-term climate risk; and (6) the participation of key individuals. While the context in which these enablers emerged is unique to Uruguay, it is likely that some factors are generalizable to other countries. Social science research needed to confirm the wider applicability of innovation systems, groundwork, data access and champion is discussed.
© 2017 The Authors MenosABSTRACT.- Increasingly challenged by climate variability and change, many of the world's governments have turned to climate services as a means to improve decision making and mitigate climate-related risk. While there have been some efforts to evaluate the economic impact of climate services, little is known about the contexts in which investments in climate services have taken place. An understanding of the factors that enable climate service investment is important for the development of climate services at local, national and international levels. This paper addresses this gap by investigating the context in which Uruguay's Ministry of Livestock, Agriculture and Fisheries invested in and developed its National System of Agriculture Information (SNIA), a national-level climate service for the agriculture sector. Using qualitative research methods, the paper uses key documents and 43 interviews to identify six factors that have shaped the decision to invest in the SNIA: (1) Uruguay's focus on sustainable agricultural intensification; (2) previous work on climate change adaptation; (3) the modernization of the meteorological service; (4) the country's open data policy; (5) the government's decision to focus the SNIA on near-term (e.g., seasonal) rather than long-term climate risk; and (6) the participation of key individuals. While the context in which these enablers emerged is unique to Uruguay, it is likely that some factors are generalizable to other countries. Social sc... Presentar Todo |
Palabras claves : |
Adaptation; Agriculture; Climate change; Climate services; Climate variability; Decision support; URUGUAY. |
Asunto categoría : |
P40 Meteorología y climatología |
URL : |
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405880717300808/pdfft?md5=11e3ffd6626e8753789caef8d494d0b1&pid=1-s2.0-S2405880717300808-main.pdf
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Marc : |
LEADER 02680naa a2200301 a 4500 001 1062744 005 2022-02-14 008 2017 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 022 $a2405-8807 024 7 $a10.1016/j.cliser.2017.11.001$2DOI 100 1 $aVAUGHAN, C. 245 $aCreating an enabling environment for investment in climate services$bThe case of Uruguay's National Agricultural Information System.$h[electronic resource] 260 $c2017 500 $aArticle history: Received 10 July 2017; Received in revised form 20 October 2017; Accepted 2 November 2017; Available online 20 November 2017. 520 $aABSTRACT.- Increasingly challenged by climate variability and change, many of the world's governments have turned to climate services as a means to improve decision making and mitigate climate-related risk. While there have been some efforts to evaluate the economic impact of climate services, little is known about the contexts in which investments in climate services have taken place. An understanding of the factors that enable climate service investment is important for the development of climate services at local, national and international levels. This paper addresses this gap by investigating the context in which Uruguay's Ministry of Livestock, Agriculture and Fisheries invested in and developed its National System of Agriculture Information (SNIA), a national-level climate service for the agriculture sector. Using qualitative research methods, the paper uses key documents and 43 interviews to identify six factors that have shaped the decision to invest in the SNIA: (1) Uruguay's focus on sustainable agricultural intensification; (2) previous work on climate change adaptation; (3) the modernization of the meteorological service; (4) the country's open data policy; (5) the government's decision to focus the SNIA on near-term (e.g., seasonal) rather than long-term climate risk; and (6) the participation of key individuals. While the context in which these enablers emerged is unique to Uruguay, it is likely that some factors are generalizable to other countries. Social science research needed to confirm the wider applicability of innovation systems, groundwork, data access and champion is discussed. © 2017 The Authors 653 $aAdaptation 653 $aAgriculture 653 $aClimate change 653 $aClimate services 653 $aClimate variability 653 $aDecision support 653 $aURUGUAY 700 1 $aDESSAI, S. 700 1 $aHEWITT, C. 700 1 $aBAETHGEN, W. 700 1 $aTERRA, R. 700 1 $aBERTERRETCHE, M. 773 $tClimate Services, 2017, Volume 8, Pages 62-71. OPEN ACCESS. doi:
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