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A list of all pages that have property "HasDescription" with value "Risk of soil erosion caused by water.". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 26 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • Rules on use of technology  + (Rules determining how different types of power plants are used.)
  • SMASH  + (SMASH provides teaching and consulting activities in mathematics, human sciences, energy and environmental economics. It has participated in a series of research programs under FP6)
  • SO2 emissions  + (SO<sub>2</sub> emissions, per source (e.g. fossil fuel burning, deforestation).)
  • GDP per capita - grid  + (Scaled down GDP per capita from country to grid level, based on population density.)
  • Energy intensity parameters  + (Set of parameters determining the energy use per unit of economic activity (in absence of technical energy efficiency improvements).)
  • IMAGE land management 3.2  + (Short description)
  • TIMER 3.2  + (Short note on this version)
  • Soil types and profiles (S-World)  + (Soil profiles based on the HWSD (Harmonised World Soil Database) and on the ISRIC-WISE international soil profile dataset)
  • Soil properties - grid  + (Soil properties that have an effect on vegetation growth and hydrology. These characteristics differ between soil types. Relevant characteristics are soil texture and depth and water holding capacity)
  • UN  + (Source for population projections in the IMAGE framework)
  • SRI (species richness index) - grid  + (Species richness calculated from MSA and species area curves.)
  • Agricultural land use suitability - grid  + (Suitability of land in a grid cell for agriculture and forestry, as a function of accessibility, population density, slope and potential crop yields.)
  • Land suitability - grid  + (Suitability of land in a grid cell for agriculture and forestry, as a function of accessibility, population density, slope and potential crop yields.)
  • Implementation of sustainability criteria in bio-energy production  + (Sustainability criteria that could become binding for dedicated bio-energy production, such as the restrictive use of water-scarce or degraded areas.)
  • More sustainable forest management  + (Sustainable forest management aims for maiSustainable forest management aims for maintaining long-term harvest potential and good ecological status of forests (e.g. the nutrient balance and biodiversity). This can be implemented by (i) enlarging the return period when a forest can be harvested again; (ii) only using certain fractions of the harvested biomass and leave the remaining part in the forests.d leave the remaining part in the forests.)
  • Non-CO2 taxation policies  + (Taxes greenhouse gas emissions in agriculture to achieve cost-optimal mitigation in the agricultural sector.)
  • Taxes and other additional costs  + (Taxes on energy use, and other additional costs)
  • Slope - grid  + (Terrain slope index.)
  • IMAGE 3.0  + (The 3.0 version is the initial version described on this site and in the [http://www.pbl.nl/en/publications/integrated-assessment-of-global-environmental-change-with-IMAGE-3.0 IMAGE 3.0 book].)
  • AD RICE model  + (The AD-RICE model estimates damage and adaptation costs resulting from the damage of climate change. Total damage costs are the sum of adaptation costs and residual damage costs (unavoided damage).)
  • CEDS database  + (The CEDS project is building a data-drivenThe CEDS project is building a data-driven, open source framework that will produce annually updated emission estimates for research and analysis.</br></br>The data system produces emission estimates by country, sector, and fuel with the following characteristics:</br>◾Annual estimates of anthropogenic emissions (not including open burning) to latest full calendar year over the entire industrial era. Readily updated every year.</br>◾Emission species: aerosol (BC, OC) and aerosol precursor and reactive compounds (SO2, NOx, NH3, CH4, CO, NMVOC) and CO2 (as reference)</br>◾State/province spatial detail for large countries – in progress</br>◾Seasonal cycle (monthly) and aggregate NMVOCs by sector/sub-sector</br>◾Gridded emissions (up to 0.1°) w/ sub-national resolution for large countries</br>◾Uncertainty estimated at the same level (country, fuel, sector) – in progressevel (country, fuel, sector) – in progress)
  • CEH  + (The Centre for Ecology & Hydrology is the UK's Centre of Excellence for integrated research in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems and their interaction with the atmosphere.)
  • FUND model  + (The Climate Framework for Uncertainty, NegThe Climate Framework for Uncertainty, Negotiation and Distribution (FUND) is a so-called integrated assessment model (IAM) of climate change. FUND was originally set-up to study the role of international capital transfers in climate policy, but it soon evolved into a test-bed for studying impacts of climate change in a dynamic context, and it is now often used to perform cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analyses of greenhouse gas emission reduction policies, to study equity of climate change and climate policy, and to support game-theoretic investigations into international environmental agreements.to international environmental agreements.)
  • DIVA model  + (The DIVA tool is an integrated, global modThe DIVA tool is an integrated, global model of coastal systems that assesses biophysical and socio-economic consequences of sea-level rise and socio-economic development taking into account the following key impacts: coastal erosion (both direct and indirect), coastal flooding (including rivers), wetland change and salinity intrusion into deltas and estuaries.inity intrusion into deltas and estuaries.)
  • DICE model  + (The Dynamic Integrated Climate-Economy modThe Dynamic Integrated Climate-Economy model (DICE), is a computer-based integrated assessment model (IAM) that “integrates in an end-to-end fashion the economics, carbon cycle, climate science, and impacts in a highly aggregated model that allows a weighing of the costs and benefits of taking steps to slow greenhouse warming." taking steps to slow greenhouse warming.")