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The International Climate Assessment Dataset (ICAD) contributes to the provision of climate services in regions across the world. ICAD provides both climate data and tools for climate monitoring and is thereby supporting the WMO Regional Climate Centres in carrying-out their mandatory functions.In WMO Regional Association VI (Europe and the Middle East), the European Climate Assessment Dataset (ECAD) fulfills this role for the last 25 years and from this the ICAD concept is derived. ICAD has been implemented in by the Indonesian meteorological service as the Southeast Asian Climate Assessment Dataset (SACAD) and this implementation has now been operational for nearly 10 years.ICAD facilitates the sharing of daily meteorological surface observations from countries in a given region with meteorological services in that region and with scientists worldwide, and deriving climate monitoring products from these observations. Examples are the climate indices of extremes, such as the number of warm or dry days, which can be monitored over time in view of climate change. ICAD complements national meteorological databases in having only a daily resolution and containing information from multiple countries in the region in the same format.As part of the EU-funded ClimSA project, ICAD will be set-up in selected Regional Climate Centres that form part of the WMO institutional network. The first pilot regions are the Caribbean and West-Africa and to these current implementations regional centres in southern Africa, eastern Africa and the Pacific will be added. In this presentation an update of the progress is given and an overview of the functions of ICAD is provided.
Besselaar et al. (Fri,) studied this question.