Results 251 to 260 of about 108,336 (305)
Severe weather events are caused by underlying weather systems (aka morphologies) that often evolve into one another. The purpose of classifying them is to try to understand the correlation between each system and the severe weather events they cause. As
Subramanian, Krishnan
openaire +3 more sources
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Severe Weather and Collateral Practices
Physical climate risks significantly influence banks' collateral practices. Drawing on comprehensive loan-level data from Sweden, we find that adverse weather events increase both the likelihood and the amount of collateral required for new loans.Cella, Cristina, Schubert, Valentin
openaire +2 more sources
Severe Weather Forecasting with Transition Information
2009 WRI World Congress on Computer Science and Information Engineering, 2009The effective information extracting from sounding data is important for severe weather forecasting. The atmospheric structure analysis has been done with V-3θ plot, which is different from the synoptic chart forecasting. This research introduces the calculation and programming of the V-3θ plot, and analyses the typical severe weather events.
Ming Wei, Xiaolong Huang
openaire +1 more source
Several Aspects Regarding Weather and Weather Derivatives [PDF]
In recent years, one of the factors that had a significant impact on the economic development was represented by climatic change. At international level, the weather risk management stands for a priority for Governments, insurance companies and companies within the industries affected by the weather variability. Within this article, we try to address a
Gheorghe Hurduzeu +1 more
openaire
2016
A hotter climate means there will be more heat waves and heat-related illnesses, such as heat exhaustion and heat stroke, the leading causes of weather-related death in the US. Without mitigation, annual world-wide heat-related deaths may exceed 225,000 by 2050.
openaire +1 more source
A hotter climate means there will be more heat waves and heat-related illnesses, such as heat exhaustion and heat stroke, the leading causes of weather-related death in the US. Without mitigation, annual world-wide heat-related deaths may exceed 225,000 by 2050.
openaire +1 more source
Severe Weather and the Macroeconomy
American Economic Journal: MacroeconomicsWe investigate the impact of severe weather shocks on the US macroeconomy over the past 60 years. Using a nonlinear vector autoregressive model, we find robust evidence of time-varying effects. While negligible at the beginning of the sample, the impact becomes signifi-cant at the end, where an increase in the severe weather index reduces aggregate ...
Hee Soo Kim +2 more
openaire +1 more source

