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Nigel W. Arnell
Researcher at University of Reading
Publications - 171
Citations - 29967
Nigel W. Arnell is an academic researcher from University of Reading. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Climate model. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 165 publications receiving 25376 citations. Previous affiliations of Nigel W. Arnell include University of East Anglia & University of Southampton.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Successful adaptation to climate change across scales
TL;DR: In this article, the authors outline a set of normative evaluative criteria for judging the success of adaptation at different scales and argue that elements of effectiveness, efficiency, equity and legitimacy are important in judging success in terms of the sustainability of development pathways into an uncertain future.
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Ecosystem Service Supply and Vulnerability to Global Change in Europe
Dagmar Schröter,Wolfgang Cramer,Rik Leemans,I. Colin Prentice,Miguel B. Araújo,Nigel W. Arnell,Alberte Bondeau,Harald Bugmann,Timothy R. Carter,Carlos Gracia,Anne Cristina de la Vega-Leinert,Markus Erhard,Frank Ewert,Margaret J. Glendining,Joanna Isobel House,Susanna Kankaanpää,Richard J. T. Klein,Sandra Lavorel,Marcus Lindner,Marc J. Metzger,Jeannette Meyer,Timothy D. Mitchell,Isabelle Reginster,Mark Rounsevell,Santi Sabaté,Stephen Sitch,Ben Smith,Jo Smith,Pete Smith,Martin T. Sykes,Kirsten Thonicke,Wilfried Thuiller,G. Tuck,Sönke Zaehle,Bärbel Zierl +34 more
TL;DR: A range of ecosystem models and scenarios of climate and land-use change to conduct a Europe-wide assessment of ecosystem service supply during the 21st century, finding that many changes increase vulnerability as a result of a decreasing supply of ecosystem services.
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Multimodel assessment of water scarcity under climate change
Jacob Schewe,Jens Heinke,Jens Heinke,Dieter Gerten,Ingjerd Haddeland,Nigel W. Arnell,Douglas B. Clark,Rutger Dankers,Stephanie Eisner,Balázs M. Fekete,Felipe J. Colón-González,Simon N. Gosling,Hyungjun Kim,Xingcai Liu,Yoshimitsu Masaki,Felix T. Portmann,Felix T. Portmann,Yusuke Satoh,Tobias Stacke,Qiuhong Tang,Yoshihide Wada,Dominik Wisser,Torsten Albrecht,Katja Frieler,Franziska Piontek,Lila Warszawski,Pavel Kabat +26 more
TL;DR: It is shown that climate change is likely to exacerbate regional and global water scarcity considerably and GHM uncertainty is particularly dominant in many regions affected by declining water resources, suggesting a high potential for improved water resource projections through hydrological model development.
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Climate change and global water resources
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used climate change scenarios developed from Hadley Centre climate simulations (HadCM2 and HadCM3), and simulated global river flows at a spatial resolution of 0.5]0.53 using a macro-scale hydrological model.
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Climate change and global water resources: SRES emissions and socio-economic scenarios
TL;DR: In this paper, an assessment of the relative effect of climate change and population growth on future global and regional water resources stresses, using SRES socio-economic scenarios and climate projections made using six climate models driven by SRES emissions scenarios, is presented.