This week, they're meeting in Geneva, Switzerland for the World Climate Conference-3(WCC-3). The administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Jane Lubchenko, heads the U.S. delegation. At the conference, she and the other delegates will be learning more about how best to share climate information with those who need it to make decisions.The overall goal of the conference - the third of its kind in 30 years - is to work toward developing a global "climate services information system," bringing together the various climate modeling and prediction efforts worldwide into a single source for climate information, to help policy and decision makers act on that knowledge. In other words, this conference is about managing the risks we know are already here from climate change.In December, world leaders will gather in Copenhagen, Denmark for the 15th meeting of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. That's where it's hoped they'll come up with a post-Kyoto treaty agreement on a global strategy to mitigate climate change going forward. There have been several negotiation sessions in the run-up to the conference, including in Bonn, Germany this past August. At stake is the extent to which countries agree to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, help developing countries do the same, and participate in the development of strategies and technologies for adapting to climate change.But it's not looking good, according to the UNFCCC web site's accountof the closing day at Bonn: