Announcement: 8th ENES-HPC workshop in Lecce/Italy
The ENES-HPC workshop is returning to Lecce/Italy for its 8th edition. The event, which has also been hosted twice by DKRZ, is organized by the European Network for Earth System Modeling (ENES) in collaboration with ESiWACE and will bring together experts in HPC in Earth system modeling on site and online from May 22nd to 24th, 2024.
First WCRP ESMO meeting at DKRZ: bridging climate modelling and observations communities
From 18-22 March 2024, the German Climate Computing Center (DKRZ) hosted the very first Earth System Modelling and Observation (ESMO) meeting of the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP), with over 100 scientists from all around the world attending on-site and remotely.
EGU 2024: DKRZ, CEN, and CLiCCS represent Hamburg climate research
From April 14th to 19th, 2024, the German Climate Computing Center (DKRZ), the Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability (CEN), and the Excellence Cluster CLICCS from the University of Hamburg will present climate and sustainability research "made in Hamburg" at the EGU in Vienna.
Python course for geosciences
From March 5-8, 2024, DKRZ and the Scientific Computing Group (WR) of the Department of Computer Science at the University of Hamburg held a dedicated online Python course for geoscientists for the 6th time.
Hands-on Workshop: Machine Learning for Climate Scientists
On March 4 and 5, 2024, the team from the new Data Analysis department held a hands-on workshop on the use of machine learning methods in climate science.
#Zusammenland: The DKRZ is on board!
Like many other scientific institutions in Germany, the DKRZ is participating in the nationwide campaign "#zusammenland - Vielfalt macht uns stark! (Diversity makes us strong)". This campaign stands for a clear stance for an open-minded country and diverse coexistence.
natESM Workshop 2024: Discussion of potential system components in Leipzig
This year's natESM community workshop took place from February 27th to 28th, 2024, in Leipzig. Approximately 80 participants were involved in in-depth discussions regarding the ongoing advancement of the natESM system.