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Societal and Economic Research and Applications Working Group (SERA WG)

Societal and Economic Research and Applications Working Group (SERA WG). Brian Mills Chair, WWRP-SERA WG Meteorological Research Division Environment Canada c/o Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo Waterloo, ON, Canada N2L 3G1 Brian.Mills@ec.gc.ca. CTV. Toronto Star.

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Societal and Economic Research and Applications Working Group (SERA WG)

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  1. Societal and Economic Research and Applications Working Group (SERA WG) Brian Mills Chair, WWRP-SERA WG Meteorological Research Division Environment Canada c/o Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo Waterloo, ON, Canada N2L 3G1 Brian.Mills@ec.gc.ca CTV Toronto Star http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/arep/wwrp/new/weather_society.html

  2. What is social science? PHYS. & NAT. SCIENCES SOCIAL SCIENCES HUMANITIES • Anthropology • Communication Studies • Economics • Geography • History • Political Science • Psychology • Sociology

  3. What is social science? “…the goal of social science is to uncover proximate causes of behaviour.” (Elster 2010) • No universal social theory akin to those developed in the physical sciences (myth of the rational actor) • Theories of the “middle-range” and “contextualized conceptualizations” Objectives: Description, explanation, and prediction

  4. Data and methods • Original data collection • Surveys and questionnaires (various sampling designs) • Structured, semi-structured, unstructured interviews • Focus groups • Direct observation (overt, covert; in situ, remote) • Experimentation and simulation • Secondary data collection • National, regional or thematic censuses/surveys (e.g., Canadian Community Health Survey) • Government, media, industry or non-governmental records (e.g., newspaper reports, web site hits) • Mining past research (for meta-analyses, benefit/impact transfer functions) • Research design and analytical methods • One-shot case studies are common, also quasi-experimental designs for field trials, simulations, and secondary data analysis • Various statistical methods (descriptive, correlational, inferential), content analysis, and qualitative techniques used

  5. Social Science and Risk Risk = probability of an event * consequences

  6. Consequences Löw and Wirtz 2012 (Munich Re Topics Geo 2011)

  7. Consequences Löw and Wirtz 2012 (Munich Re Topics Geo 2011)

  8. Analysis of Consequences Lazo, J.K., M. Lawson, P.H. Larsen, and D.M. Waldman, 2011. U.S. economic sensitivity to weather variability, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 92(6):709-720. Interannual aggregate dollar variation in U.S. economic activity that is attributable to weather variability could be 3.4% or $485 billion of the 2008 gross domestic product. 3% of gross world product* in 2011 = $2.3 trillion *based on Earth Policy Institute and IMF GWP figures

  9. Key question • How much of the impact can be affected by improved weather and related risk information and associated services (interventions)? • basis for estimating social and economic value • assumptions concerning information, behaviour, and outcomes, i.e., what constitutes “success” • attributes of forecast meet certain thresholds of acceptance (e.g., timing, spatial precision, magnitude, duration) • forecast was disseminated (timeliness) • receipt of the forecast • forecast was understood • recipients were satisfied with the information • behavioural intent (understanding consequences and actions) • information was used in making decisions • recipients adjusted their behaviour • outcomes of decisions and behaviours were positive and “appropriate” • other?

  10. Attribution of benefits is difficult Outdoor recreation? Home construction Urbanization & ag technology ER & medicine Wx forecasting? Sources: Statistics Canada, vital statistics; Lopez & Holle, 1998

  11. Social science contributions to/from the “weather enterprise” • Justification for past and planned investments • Complementary role in the selection, design, testing, implementation and evaluation of system changes/improvements(publication quantity and quality; standard verification procedures; simple measures of public use, awareness, satisfaction) • Advancement of broader social science theory, conceptualization, and analytical methods

  12. SERA WG The primary purpose of the WG SERA is to advance the science of the social and economic application of weather-related information and services. This is accomplished in part through the development, review and promotion of societal and economic-related demonstration projects focused on high-impact weather (HIW) and information. Activities address one or more of the following priority knowledge and application areas: • estimation of the economic (societal) value of weather information; • understanding and improving the use of weather information in decision making; • understanding and improving the communication of weather forecast uncertainty; • development of user-relevant verification methods; and • development of decision support systems and tools.

  13. Membership L-R:Joanne Robbins (UK), Jacqueline Frick (Switzerland), Linda Anderson-Berry (Australia), Haleh Kootval (WMO-PWS), Brian Mills (chair, Canada), Angelika Wirtz (IRDR, Germany), Kwabena Anaman (Ghana). Not pictured:Paul Kovacs (Canada), Jeffrey Lazo (ex-officio, USA), Nanette Lomarda (WMO-WWRP), Eugene Poolman (South Africa), Michael Staudinger (Austria), David Johnston (IRDR, New Zealand)

  14. Meetings/expert contributions • U.S. National Hurricane Conference, Atlanta, April 2011 • Grand Forks Integrated Warning Team Workshop, Fargo, U.S.A., June 2011 • 2011 AMS Summer Community Meeting, Boulder, CO. August 2011 • World Meteorological Organization (WMO) World Weather Research Programme (WWRP) Thorpex International Core Steering Committee meeting, Geneva, September 2011 • WMO RA VI Conference on Social and Economic Benefits of Weather, Climate and Water Services, Lucerne, Switzerland, October 2011 • The Womens Insurance Network, London, UK, October 2011 • Stakeholders Workshop for JCOMM-CHy Coastal Inundation Forecasting Demonstration Project in Bangladesh (CIFDP-BSW), November-December 2011 • NWS Weather Ready Nation: A Vital Conversation - Norman, OK - December 2011 • PERILS, Zurich, Switzerland, December 2011 • American Meteorological Society annual meetings, New Orleans, January 2012 • Coastal Cities at Risk international (Manila, Bankok, Lagos, Vancouver) case study planning workshop, Vancouver, March 2012 • Thorpex Africa RC meeting, May 2012 • Property Claims Service Annual Conference, Orlando, U.S.A., May 2012 • Global Platform on Disaster Reduction, Geneva, Switzerland, May 2012

  15. Activities • Coordination and integration with IRDR • formal working arrangement between the WMO WWRP and the Integrated Research on Disaster Risk (IRDR) programme (ICSU, ISSC, UNISDR) effective Jan 2012 • permits access to a much deeper pool of social and interdisciplinary scientific expertise that is engaged in similar research across the broad spectrum of natural, social, and technological risks and hazards • Implementation to proceed through identifying opportunities for collaboration (defining common case studies, mutual lines of inquiry, and training/knowledge exchange sessions) with the IRDR Forensic Investigations of Disasters (FORIN), Risk Interpretation and Action (RIA), and Disaster Loss Data (DATA) working groups • potential involvement in joint young scientist capacity-building programme with the recently designated IRDR Centre of Excellence based at The Academy of Sciences in Taipei, China

  16. Activities • SERA Guidance document • draft document guiding proponents in the design, costing and implementation of SERA elements of atmospheric science project proposals seeking sanction from the WWRP prepared • discussed at the July 2012 WG meeting and will be finalized for submission to the WWRP-JSC (2013) • WWRP/Thorpex/WCRP Sub-seasonal to Seasonal Prediction Project • draft publication Applications of seasonal to sub-seasonal weather and climate predictions: An annotated bibliography prepared • SERA member review over the next few months and completed (Dec 2012) • SERA WG chair has provided input to the project implementation plan and will solicit additional feedback from WG members

  17. Activities • WWRP Polar Prediction Project • input on introduction/context and SERA sections provided to draft project implementation plan • representation on SC; participated in the 27-28 March 2012 SC meeting • feedback will be sought from the WG members and the Arctic social science community as the plan moves to the next phase of completion • coordination with related activities (e.g., PCW satellite mission) Benefit Areas

  18. Activities Communicating Risk and Uncertainty Workshop (BoM, Melbourne, 25-30 July 2012) • extension of planned SERA WG meeting, combining SERA member expertise with invited Australasian/international researchers and practitioners • update and report on current and cutting-edge research across two of the SERA research priorities: understanding and improving the use of weather information in decision making; and understanding and improving the communication of weather forecast uncertainty • broader objective is to support the building of hazard-resilient communities (geographic and social) (WMO and IRDR) • papers and discussion summary in preparation to be published as stand-alone and/or incorporated into suitable WWRP documents • information and collaborations to inform, guide and implement the SERA Research Demonstration Project (RDP)

  19. Activities Key areas of discussion • integration of knowledge across disciplines, players (including media, insurers), perspectives and sources (indigenous, local, expert) • treatment of language and contributions from literature and other humanities scholarship and practice • importance of processes of engagement, and relationship/trust-building relative to the specific forecast, product, or recommendation • tailoring information and methods to audiences and their contexts/situations/technical capacities/preferences • communities as a focus of investigation and target of communication • role of insurance and insurers • ethical aspects and issues

  20. Activities Understanding the societal and economic dimensions of weather-related warning systems: A SERA Research Demonstration Project (RDP) • draft research and application framework is in development and will be finalized for presentation at the next WWRP JSC meeting (2013) • draft will include an overview scan of current NMHS warning systems (coordination with PWS, DRR) • specific studies will be identified and developed within the framework taking advantage of new and on-going WMO-sanctioned, IRDR, and NMHS projects (e.g., SWFDPs; JCOMM/CHy Coastal Inundation FDP; MeteoAlarm; South African Flood Forecast Guidance (SAFFG) Project; impact forecasting projects; La Plata Basin proposed RDP; Integrated Nowcasting for Central Europe Area (INCA-CE) project; IRDR forensic case studies) (2013-2015)

  21. Activities Projects/activities with THORPEX • SERA efforts in the sub-seasonal and polar prediction activities will be a primary means of contributing to the renewed Thorpex programme • Summer School NSF proposal (Shapiro and Tribbia) • Members involved in RC activities (e.g., K. Anaman, Africa; B. Mills, NARC) • Analysis of TIGGE-based early warning system prototype developed by Matsueda et al. [http://tparc.mri-jma.go.jp/TIGGE/index.html] with regional disaster loss data is a potential candidate study that could also contribute to SERA RDP plans and a joint project with JWGFVR (societal and traditional verification) • Potential for a Thorpex Benefit Assessment as an objective complement to the Progress and/or Review reporting exercise

  22. Planned Meetings • IRDR Risk Interpretation and Action (RIA) meeting (China, November 2012) • Fourth WWRP-SERA WG meeting, Canada (tbd, October/November 2013) • Social Science for Weather Prediction training workshop (tbd, 2013-14) • WWRP Open Science Conference (August 2014)

  23. Expected role for SERA in final stages/renewal of Thorpex? • Justification for past and planned investments • Complementary role in the selection, design, testing, implementation and evaluation of system changes/improvements(publication quantity and quality; standard verification procedures; simple measures of public use, awareness, satisfaction) • Advancement of broader social science theory, conceptualization, and analytical methods

  24. Across and between disciplines

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