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a) CLIMATE CHANGE-The IPCC Scientific Assessment. The 1990 report of the IPCC Scientific Assessment Working Group (also in Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish).

b) CLIMATE CHANGE - The IPCC Impacts Assessment. The 1990 report of the IPCC Impacts Assessment Working Group (also in Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish).

c) CLIMATE CHANGE - The IPCC Response Strategies. The 1990 report of the IPCC Response Strategies Working Group (also in Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish).

d) Overview and Policymaker Summaries, 1990.

Emissions Scenarios (prepared by the IPCC Response Strategies Working Group), 1990.

Assessment of the Vulnerability of Coastal Areas to Sea Level Rise — A Common Methodology, 1991.

II. IPCC SUPPLEMENT (1992)

a) CLIMATE CHANGE 1992 — The Supplementary Report to the IPCC Scientific Assessment. The 1992 report of the IPCC Scientific Assessment Working Group.

b) CLIMATE CHANGE 1992 — The Supplementary Report to the IPCC Impacts Assessment. The 1990 report of the IPCC Impacts Assessment Working Group.

CLIMATE CHANGE: The IPCC 1990 and 1992 Assessments — IPCC First Assessment Report Overview and Policymaker Summaries, and 1992 IPCC Supplement (also in Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish).

Global Climate Change and the Rising Challenge of the Sea. Coastal Zone Management Subgroup of the IPCC Response Strategies Working Group, 1992.

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IV. IPCC SECOND ASSESSMENT REPORT, 1995 a) CLIMATE CHANGE 1995 - The Science of Climate Change. (including Summary for Policymakers). Report of IPCC Working Group I, 1995.

b) CLIMATE CHANGE 1995 - Scientific-Technical Analyses of Impacts, Adaptations and Mitigation of Climate Change. (including Summary for Policymakers). Report of IPCC Working Group II, 1995.

c) CLIMATE CHANGE 1995- The Economic and Social Dimensions of Climate Change. (including Summary for Policymakers). Report of IPCC Working Group III, 1995. d) The IPCC Second Assessment Synthesis of Scientific-Technical Information Relevant to Interpreting Article 2 of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, 1995.

(Please note: the IPCC Synthesis and the three Summaries for Policymakers have been published in a single volume and are also available in Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish).

IPCC Procedures for the Preparation, Review and Publication of its Technical Papers

At its Eleventh Session (Rome, 11-15 December 1995), the h)
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change adopted by
consensus the following procedures for the preparation of
Technical Papers.

IPCC Technical Papers are prepared on topics for which an independent, international scientific/technical perspective is deemed essential. They:

a) are based on the material already in the IPCC assessment reports and special reports;

b) are initiated: (i) in response to a formal request from the Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change or its subsidiary bodies and agreed by the IPCC Bureau; or (ii) as decided by the Panel;

c) are prepared by a team of authors, including a convening lead author, selected by the IPCC Bureau, in accordance with the guidelines of the selection of lead authors contained in the IPCC Procedures;*

d) are submitted in draft form for simultaneous expert and government review at least four weeks before the comments are due;

e) are revised by the lead authors based upon the comments reviewed in the step above;

f) are submitted for final government review at least four weeks before the comments are due;

g) are finalized by the lead authors, in consultation with the IPCC Bureau which functions in the role of an editorial board, based on the comments received; and,

if necessary, as determined by the IPCC Bureau, would include in an annex differing views, based on comments made during final government review, not otherwise adequately reflected in the paper.

Such Technical Papers are then made available to the Conference of the Parties or its subsidiary body, in response to its request, and thereafter publicly. If initiated by the Panel, Technical Papers are made available publicly. In either case, IPCC Technical Papers prominently state in the beginning:

"This is a Technical Paper of the Inter-
governmental Panel on Climate Change prepared
in response to a [request from the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change]/[deci-
sion of the Panel]. The material herein has under-
gone expert and government review but has not
been considered by the Panel for possible accep-
tance or approval."

• Preparation of the first draft of a report should be undertaken by lead authors identified by the relevant Working Group bureau from those experts cited in the lists provided by all countries and participating organizations, with due consideration being given to those known through their publication or work. In so far as practicable, the composition of the group of lead authors for a section of a report shall reflect fair balance among different points of view that can reasonably be expected by the Working Group bureau, and should include at least one expert from a developing country.

OMM

PNUE

INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE

WMO

UNEP

An Introduction to Simple Climate Models used in the IPCC Second Assessment Report

Edited by

John T. Houghton

L. Gylvan Meira Filho

David J. Griggs

Kathy Maskell

This is a Technical Paper of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change prepared in response to a request from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The material herein has undergone expert and government review, but has not been considered by the Panel for possible acceptance or approval.

February 1997

This paper was prepared under the auspices of IPCC Working Group I, which is co-chaired by
Sir John T. Houghton of the United Kingdom and Dr L. Gylvan Meira Filho of Brazil.

© 1997, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

ISBN: 92-9169-101-1

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