
Jelmer JeuringNorwegian Meteorological Institute · Development Centre for Weather Forecasting
Jelmer Jeuring
Doctor of Philosophy
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47
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Introduction
Jelmer Jeuring currently works at the Development centre for weather forecasting at the Norwegian Meteorological Institute
Publications
Publications (47)
I 2022 gjennomførte en tverrfaglig gruppe ved Meteorologisk institutt (MET) 13 kvalitative intervjuer for å få dypere innsikt i hva og hvordan personer, med ulik bakgrunn, tenker omkring farlig vær og farevarsler. Ved å analysere intervjuene fant vi ut at det er forskjellige oppfatninger om hva som er farlig vær, og det samsvarer ikke nødvendigvis...
Seasonal and sub-seasonal forecast information can be crucial for agricultural activities if transformed into meaningful and actionable products. However, challenges persist due to forecast providers' scarce knowledge of farmers' decision processes and information needs, and difficulties in effectively communicating uncertainties and probabilities....
Arctic observations in 2023 provided clear evidence of rapid and pronounced climate and environmental change, shaped by past and ongoing human activities that release greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and push the broader Earth system into uncharted territory. This chapter provides a snapshot of 2023 and summarizes decades-long trends observed a...
The Polar Regions are facing a wide range of compounding challenges, from climate change to increased human activity. Infrastructure, rescue services and disaster-response capabilities are limited in these remote environments. Relevant and usable weather, water, ice and climate (WWIC) information is vital for safety, activity success, adaptation an...
The Polar Prediction Project (PPP), one of the flagship programmes of the World Meteorological Organisation’s (WMO) World Weather Research Programme (WWRP), has come to an end after a decade of intensive and coordinated international observing, modelling, verification, user engagement, and education activities. While PPP facilitated many advancemen...
Previous research indicates that forecast uncertainty can, in certain formats and decision contexts, provide actionable insights that help users in their decision-making. However, how to best disseminate forecast uncertainty, which factors affect successful uptake, and how forecast uncertainty transforms into better decision-making remains an ongoi...
The Arctic’s extreme environmental conditions and remoteness make it a complex and dynamic environment for maritime operators. We find that Arctic shipping has grown by 7% per year over the past decade, despite the hazardous weather and sea-ice conditions that pose risks to vessels operating in the region. As a result of a strong increase in winter...
The Arctic’s extreme environmental conditions and remoteness make it a complex and dynamic environment for maritime operators. We find that Arctic shipping has grown by 7% per year over the past decade, despite the hazardous weather and sea-ice conditions that pose risks to vessels operating in the region. As a result of a strong increase in winter...
Oppsummering av kvartalsvise spørreundersøkelser i Climate Futures 2022.
In the ice-infested Arctic Ocean environment, the uptake of new sea ice services is an important factor in ensuring safe and efficient marine operations. Producers increasingly turn to co-production for user input, similar to the wider field of climate services. This paper asks how the uptake of sea ice information services can be optimized, by gau...
Abstract: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EMS2022/EMS2022-150.html
Abstract: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EMS2022/EMS2022-153.html
Award: https://www.emetsoc.org/2022-poster-award-impact-based-warning-information-for-ice-throw-risk/
At MET Norway, a small interdisciplinary team - the Sandbox - explores novel ways to improve the communication between the meteorologists and their audiences. At the moment the Sandbox consists of seven forecasters, researchers, and communication advisors with backgrounds from both natural and social sciences. Over the past six years, this has been...
Risk management for wind farms has become more standardized in terms of calculating acceptable risk criteria, but so far the communication of possible risks and their consequences for societal actors has not evolved into a validated set of best practices. The current state of knowledge about best practices for ice throw/fall risk communication is s...
Risk management for wind farms has become more standardized in terms of calculating acceptable risk criteria, but so far the communication of possible risks and their consequences for societal actors has not evolved into a validated set of best practices. The current state of knowledge about best practices for ice throw/fall risk communication is s...
At MET Norway, a small interdisciplinary team - the Sandbox - spends part of their working hours trying to improve the communication between the meteorologists and their audience. In this article we invite the reader to
join us on a journey along the Sandbox process during 2021. The focus of our work that year was on the communication of forecast u...
This report is written as part of Work Package 4 in the project Wind Energy in Icing Climates. The aim of this report is to address some key challenges in the current ways ice-throw/fall hazards are communicated about and how this communication can be improved in Norwegian wind turbine parks, especially when aiming to inform (potential) non-expert...
At MET Norway, a small team-the Sandbox-are spending part of their working hours trying to improve the communication between the meteorologists and the audience. At the moment the Sandbox consists of seven forecasters, researchers, and communication advisors with backgrounds from both natural and social sciences. Over the past five years, this has...
The Norwegian Meteorological institute User surveys indicate that the Norwegian Meteorological Institute (MET Norway) enjoys a very high level of trust in the Norwegian population, being the state agency with the best reputation in Norway 15 years in a row. In our latest annual polling close to 85 percent say they have a high degree of trust in our...
The Arctic faces multiple pressures including climate change, shifting demographics, human health risks, social justice imbalances, governance issues, and expanding resource extraction. A convergence of academic disciplines—such as natural and social sciences, engineering and technology, health and medicine—and international perspectives is require...
Climate change ought to be a natural part of the weather conversation on TV, radio and social media. Inspired by similar projects in other countries, the Norwegian Meteorological institute established a project in 2019 to develop their TV meteorologists as climate change communicators. The main objective in the project was to integrate research-bas...
This report presents the results of an online workshop organised in January 2021 by the Socio-Economic Research and Applications group of the Polar Prediction Project (PPP-SERA). This, so called, Special Services Workshop gathers researchers involved in current projects aimed at co-producing environmental information services for maritime actors an...
Worldwide, about 80 percent of national hydrological and meteorological services are separated in two agencies. In Norway, the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate (NVE) is responsible for avalanche, landslide and flood warnings, whereas the Norwegian Meteorological Institute (MET Norway) is responsible for severe weather warnings. Even...
Like most National Meteorological and Hydrological Services (NMHSs), MET Norway is primarily known for forecasting the weather. Still, there is also a high degree of trust among the public in our climate research and in our TV meteorologists as climate change communicators. The TV meteorologists are experienced science communicators, speak a langua...
Recognition is growing that valuable weather, water, ice and climate (WWIC) services for marine, Arctic environments can only be produced in close dialogue with its actual users. This denotes an acknowledgement that knowing how users incorporate WWIC information in their activities should be considered throughout the information value chain. Notion...
SALIENSEAS brings together a team of social and natural scientists, metocean service personnel, and end-users, with the aim to 1). Better understand the mobility patterns, constraints, challenges, decision-making contexts and information needs of end-users in different European Arctic marine sectors; 2). Develop and apply participatory tools for co...
Production and consumption roles in tourism are often attributed exclusively to different stakeholders. However, when touristic consumption and production of ‘home’ and ‘away’ blur, stakeholder roles and relationships become entangled in circuits of ‘re-consumption’, making exclusive role attributions problematic and restrictive. This qualitative s...
Tourism research often tends to overlook both the mundane of the exotic and the exotic of the everyday. However, when acknowledging that exoticism is not necessarily linked to geographical distance, it is similarly possible to attribute touristic otherness to and experience unfamiliarity in a geographically proximate environment. This entails a nee...
Despite variable and relatively cool summer weather, domestic vacations in countries around the North Sea are an important type of tourism. However, relations between weather and domestic tourism in this region remain understudied. A quantitative research (n = 326) among domestic camping tourists in The Netherlands explores perceived personal signi...
The notion of tourism encompasses many different ideas about attractiveness of places, when someone is or feels a tourist or not, which activities are typically touristic, where these places are located and what activities are appropriate. Over time, this has resulted in a certain socially accepted ordering of tourism. However, when a globalized to...
Tourism research often tends to overlook both the mundane of the exotic and the exotic of the everyday. However, when acknowledging that exoticism is not necessarily linked to geographical distance, it is similarly possible to attribute touristic otherness to and experience unfamiliarity in a geographically proximate environment. This entails a nee...
The importance of residents’ communication about their home region as tourist destination is increasingly acknowledged in the place branding process. However, the extent to which residents feel responsible for communicating Destination Images (DIs), and how these attributions affect word-of-mouth (WOM) behavior has remained unclear. This paper addr...
Imaginaries of touristic otherness have traditionally been closely related to geographical distance and travel far away from the everyday. But in today's context of sustainable tourism, a moral and behavioral shift may be expected, toward traveling near home. Distance may actually become a disadvantage and proximity a new commodity. This implies a...
Discourses in tourism destination marketing play an important role in constructing and consuming tourism destinations. However, various discursive contradictions can emerge, potentially limiting or facilitating tourism development. This paper has two objectives. First, it aims to identify discursive contradictions embedded in the positioning statem...
Het betreft een scenariostudie naar de competenties van de toekomstige reisprofessional. Uitgevoerd in opdracht van Reiswerk.
As one of its main resources, weather is an integral part of tourism. Yet little is known about how individual
tourists experience the weather and how it affects the subjective perception of their holidays.
The weather appears to have a prominent place in language and the use of the weather in narratives of
tourists can provide insight into how the...
http://library.wur.nl/WebQuery/clc/1962977