Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • Themes
    • Water, Sanitation, Hygiene
    • Integrated Water Resource Management
    • Productivity and Efficiency
    • Governance
  • About
  • Training Resources
  • U.S. Domestic Resources
  • Guidance
    • How to Open a Database File
    • How to Open a Document

User menu

  • Log in
  • Sign up

U.S. Water Partnership Resource Portal

  • Integrated Water Resource Management

Climate Change Indicators in the United States

Link Broken? 
Access this resource
Share
Twitter logo Facebook logo LinkedIn logo
Document (.pdf, .doc)
6,360 KM
Published: 
Saturday, December 1, 2012
The National Institutes for Water Resources
EPA's Climate Change Indicators in the United States, 2012, presents compelling evidence that many fundamental measures of climate in the United States are changing. Temperatures are rising, snow and rainfall patterns are shifting, and more extreme climate events'like heavy rainstorms and record-high temperatures'are already affecting society and ecosystems. Similar changes are occurring around the world.
Theme(s) & Sub-theme(s): 
Monitoring and EvaluationIntegrated Water Resource Management
Nexus Tag(s): 
Climate
Resource type: 
Website/Blog
Region & Countries: 
Latin America and the Caribbean
Resource Scale: 
Global

Related resources

West-Wide Climate Risk Assessments: Bias-Corrected and Spatially Downscaled Surface Water Projections - 6
Discover Kyrgyzstan: Snow Leopards, Fresh Water, and Climate Change
Waters Supply Stress Index
Need help using this resource?
U.S. Water Partnership

Footer menu

  • Search USWP Member Sites
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Credits

© 2014 U.S. Water Partnership Web Portal