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CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

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Page 1: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

CRTI 02 0093RDAdvanced Emergency Response System forCBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment

24-25 August 2005 Meeting

CMC-Dorval

Page 2: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

9:00 Welcome / General project status / Challenges Richard Hogue 9:30 Meso-scale modeling and inclusion of urban terrain (Component 2)

General overview (20min.) Stéphane Bélair/Jocelyn MailhotTown Energy Balance (TEB) (15 min.) Aude LemonsuUrban surface database (15 min.) Alexandre LerouxAnthropogenic fluxes (10 min.) Najat Benbouta3D-Turbulence (20 min.) Claude PelletierExperimental CFD Modeling at RPN (20 min.) Pierre Pellerin MUSE 2004-05 field study (20 min.) Frédéric Chagnon/Gilles Morneau

11:30 Discussion on field studies (New York tracer experiment, etc.)11:45 Visit of the CMC Supercomputer room12:00 Lunch (catered in the conference room)

13h00 Modeling the urban microscale flow (Component 1) Fue-Sang Lien, Eugene Yee, 14:00 LS dispersion model (Component 4) John Wilson

14h45 Group discussion Identify issues and challenges / what’s next ….Identify points to discuss on day 2

16h30-17h00 end of day 1

Proposed agenda

Page 3: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

Day 2 – Discussions - Coordination – Next steps - Working togetherThursday, August 25 , 2nd floor conference room.

9h00 Introduction & review of day 1

9h15 Coupling the urban microscale model to the “urbanized” mesoscale model

How to interface urbanSTREAM flow model with “urbanized” GEM-LAMHow to interface with urbanLS ?How to validate and test ?

Discussions

12:00 Lunch (catered in the conference room)

13:00 Discussions / Other topics

15:00 Review of project milestones

16h:00 Wrap up

Page 4: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

Our objective…

• The objective of this project is to develop and validate an integrated, state-of-the-art, high-fidelity multi-scale modeling system for the accurate and efficient prediction of urban flow and dispersion of CBRN materials.

• Development of this proposed multi-scale modeling system will provide the real-time modeling and simulation tool to predict injuries, casualties, and contamination and to make relevant decisions (based on the strongest technical and scientific foundations) to minimize the consequences based on a pre-determined decision making framework.

Prototype to be ready in early 2007

Page 5: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

The project partners

• Environment Canada Meteorological Service of Canada– Canadian Meteorological Centre (Michel Jean/Richard

Hogue et al.) + MSC Quebec Region– Atmospheric and Climate Sciences Directorate (Gilbert

Brunet et al.)• DRDC Suffield (Eugene Yee et al.)• HC RPB (Kurt Ungar et al.)• AECL (Phil Davis et al.)• University of Waterloo (F.S. Lien et al.)• University of Alberta (J.D. Wilson et al.)• Builds on on-going A-Base activities as well as on other CRTI

projects

Page 6: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

Component 1: Development and implementation of urban flow models to predict mean flow and

turbulence at urban microscale (building/street scale to neighborhood scale)

Component 2:Inclusion of the effects of urban terrain in the sub-grid scales of GEM-LAM through urban parametrization : “urbanized” mesoscale model

Component 3:Coupling the urban microscale flow model to the “urbanized” mesoscale model

Component 4: Lagrangian Stochastic (LS) model for the prediction of urban dispersion of CBRN agens. Will use mean flow and turbulence predicted by the multi-scale flow model.

Component 5:Verification and validation

Project components

Page 7: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval
Page 8: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

Meeting objectives / challenges….

• Status report of each project partners

• Coupling issues

• Validation issues

• Increase collaborations and scientific exchanges

• etc.

Page 9: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

Leverage: Current CRTI projects at the Canadian Meteorological Centre

• CRTI 01 0080TA ‘Information Management and Decision Support System for Radiological-Nuclear (RN) Hazard Preparedness & Response’; HC Radiation Protection Bureau lead; Federal partner EC-MSC; academic partners U of Alberta; private partners Prolog development Centre.

– CRTI funding (through Health Canada): 105K– Status. Project completed. Supplementary funding being seeked through the Canada-US Public Security Technical Program to establish bi-directional

operational connections with US Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (US DHS)– On-going funding for operational support to be seeked through phase 2 of CRTI (MC to be submitted this Fall by CRTI secretariat; upon TB approval)

• CRTI 02 0093RD ‘Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment’; EC-MSC is the lead; Federal partners are DND DRDC Suffield, Health Canada Radiation Protection Bureau, Atomic Energy Canada Limited (Chalk River); academic partners U of Waterloo and U of Alberta; private partners Kosteniuk Inc.

– CRTI funding (EC MSC lead): 3485K (EC CMC 2181K)– Status. Project on schedule. Supplementary funding approved (310K) through the Canada-US Public Security Technical Program to establish bi-

directional operational connections with US Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (US DHS) and the DHS sponsored New York City Urban Dispersion Program

– On-going funding for operational support to be seeked through phase 2 of CRTI (MC to be submitted this Fall by CRTI secretariat; upon TB approval)

• CRTI 02 0041RD ‘Real-Time Determination of Area of Influence of CBRN Releases’; HC RPB lead; federal partners EC-MSC, AECL; Academic partners York and McGill universities.

– CRTI funding (through Health Canada): 625.7K– Status. Project on schedule. – On-going funding for operational support to be seeked through phase 2 of CRTI (MC to be submitted this Fall by CRTI secretariat; upon TB approval)

• CRTI 02 0066RD ‘Development of simulation programs to prepare against and manage outbreaks of highly contagious diseases of animals’ CFIA lead; Federal partners EC-MSC, Ag Can; Academic partners Guelph university, Colorado State University.

– CRTI funding (through CFIA): 130K– Status. Project on schedule, EC MSC component completed. Supplementary funding being seeked through the Canada-US Public Security Technical

Program to establish bi-directional operational connections with US Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (US DHS) on the prediction of spread of foreign animal diseases.

– On-going funding for operational support to be seekd through phase 2 of CRTI (MC to be submitted this Fall by CRTI secretariat; upon TB approval)

• CRTI 03 0018RD “Experimental Characterization of Risk for Radiological Dispersal Devices (RDDs)”; DND DRDC Ottawa lead; Federal partners DRDC Valcartier, HC RPB, EC CMC; Academic partners RMC Kingston, UOIT, Carleton, UBC

– CRTI funding (through DRDC Ottawa): none, leverage of resources from CRTI 02 0093RD project– Status. Project starting. Supplementary funding approved through the Canada-US Public Security Technical Program to establish bi-directional

operational connections with US Sandia National Laboratory (US DHS)

Page 10: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval

Leverage: Submitted CRTI projects involving the Canadian Meteorological Centre

• CRTI 04 0127TD ‘CHIRP – Canadian Health Integrated Response Platform’ ; Public Health Agency of Canada lead; Federal partner EC-MSC; Health Canada Radiation Protection Bureau.

– Requested CRTI funding (through PHAC): 423.5K– Status. Project successfully passed through phase 1 of selection process.

• CRTI 05 xxxxRD ‘Evaluating exposures to non-weaponized biological and chemical agents in real, complex environments.’; CFIA lead ; Federal partner DND DRDC Suffield, EC CMC, National Research Council; academic partner U Victoria ; private partner AMITA corporation, Dycor Technologies ; US partner Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (DHS), US army Aberdeen Proving Ground

– Requested CRTI funding (through PHAC): TBD– Status. Project successfully passed through phase 1 of previous selection process, but proposal

dropped because of workload issues and timing for Bacillus Thuriengis spraying. Project to be re-submitted this Fall.

PSTP:• CRTI approved on 27 July 2005 310K of supplementary funding for CRTI 02 0093 RD (lead EC MSC) under a

Canada-US project titled ‘United States/Canada Collaborative Projects on Science and Technology in Urban Transport Modeling Related to Homeland Security’

Page 11: CRTI 02 0093RD Advanced Emergency Response System for CBRN Hazard Prediction and Assessment for the Urban Environment 24-25 August 2005 Meeting CMC-Dorval