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Symposium 2013 4-6 November 2013, Baltimore CURRENT STATUS OF DEVELOPMENT OF OCEAN ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION SERVICES Pierre Bahurel, Mercator Ocean, France Frank Aikman, NOAA, US Tim Moltmann, IMOS, Australia

Current status of development of ocean environmental ...godae-data/Symposium/GOV-presentations/… · What changes with MyOcean Copernicus • A single catalog with information produced

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Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

CURRENT STATUS OF DEVELOPMENT OF

OCEAN ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION SERVICES

Pierre Bahurel, Mercator Ocean, France

Frank Aikman, NOAA, US

Tim Moltmann, IMOS, Australia

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

MyOcean Copernicus, Europe

IMOS, Australia

National Ocean Service, US

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

Talk outline

We consider three ocean environmental core services :

IMOS, NOS, and MyOcean.

We ask them three questions:

• Why today? Why does the service exist today?

• What’s new? What does it change?

• So what? So, what do the users think about this service?

Our goal is to understand how operational oceanography moves from R&D demonstrations to operational information services

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

QUICK OVERVIEW A few slides to present IMOS, NOS and Copernicus Marine

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

IMOS: Integrated Marine Observing System

• A national collaborative research infrastructure, funded by Australian Government

• Open ocean, onto the continental shelf and into the coast...

• Integrated across physics, chemistry, and biology

• A portfolio of platform based Facilities Argo, SOOP, Deepwater Moorings, Gliders, AUV’s, Shelf/Coastal Moorings, Radar, Animal Tagging, Sensor Networks, and Remote Sensing

• A data portal, where data are freely available

www.imos.org.au

contact person: Tim Moltman

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

NOS: NOAA’s National Ocean Service

• A national service, funded by the US government

• Operational Forecast Systems (OFS) for the Coastal and Estuarine Environment – A network of coastal forecast systems all along the US coasts

• Mainly focussed on physical oceanography

• A data portal, where data are freely available

oceanservice.noaa.gov contact person: Frank Aikman

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

MyOcean: The EU Copernicus Marine Service

• A European service, funded by EU and the Member States

• Monitoring and Forecasting data centres, for the global ocean and European seas – Integration of observation- and model-based data in a single

catalogue

• Open ocean, regional seas ; ocean physics and bio-geochemistry, real-time and reanalyses

• A data portal, where data are freely available

marine.copernicus.eu contact person: Pierre Bahurel

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

WHY TODAY?

Why does the service exist today? What were or are the motivations?

What are the conditions that made this transition possible?

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

Why does IMOS exist today?

Motivation: a marine nation

• 3rd largest ocean territory on Earth

• Australia: a ‘marine nation’

• Inadequate marine observing effort

Objective : support science

• to provide observations and data to the marine and climate science community, as a research infra

Framework : gov. program

• Australia’s government ready to invest $130M over 8 years

• A group of partners ready to go

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

Why does NOS exist today?

Motivation: support operations

• Safe & efficient navigation

• Emergency response

• Environmentally sound mgt of the coastal zone

Objective: develop operational models

• to develop a national network of operational hydrodynamic models providing nowcasts and short-term forecasts

Framework: gov. agency

• NOAA’s National Ocean Service

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

Why does MyOcean Copernicus exist today?

Motivation : use Earth data

• Foster the use of Earth observation data in downstream applications

• Take benefit of a multi-year and successful community work

Objective : improve and simplify

• to improve ocean information and simplify access to it

Framework : EU program

• EU Copernicus program for marine (60 M€ so far)

• 60 partners / 28 countries ready to co-invest

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

Why today?

• a good reason + a good organisation + a good sponsor

– The good reason was already there, and is reinforced by a successful R&D

– A good organisation means skilled partners and a continuous networking approach

– The sponsor understands and supports an « open & free » data policy for the core service

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

WHAT’S NEW?

what is the added value for users?

where stands the difference with the previous situation?

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with IMOS

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with IMOS

www.aodn.org.au

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with IMOS

• multiple institutions engaged with complementary capabilities

• a ‘data centric’ infrastructure for use by all

• a move towards a culture of open data access

• more effective relationships with other components of the research & innovation system (vessels, other data holders, modeling)

• synergies with IT capabilities (computing, data, tools)

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with IMOS

• multiple institutions engaged with complementary capabilities

• a ‘data centric’ infrastructure for use by all

• a move towards a culture of open data access

• more effective relationships with other components of the research & innovation system (vessels, other data holders, modeling)

• synergies with IT capabilities (computing, data, tools)

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with NOS

tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with NOS

• A plan for a full network, with systems already in operations

• Integration of observing system data, model predictions

• A common model framework, including real-time data ingest, a 24x7 QC, dissemination tool via web display or OpenDAP

• Well-defined standards; runs regularly & automatically; reliability, stability & commitment

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with NOS

• A plan for a full network, with systems already in operations

• Integration of observing system data, model predictions

• A common model framework, including real-time data ingest, a 24x7 QC, dissemination tool via web display or OpenDAP

• Well-defined standards; runs regularly & automatically; reliability, stability & commitment

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with MyOcean Copernicus

SEA LEVEL

SEA ICE

BIOGEO

CHEMISTRY SEA WIND

CURRENTS TEMPERATURE

SALINITY

REANALYSES

10 to 45 years

REAL-TIME

Daily, hourly FORECAST

2 to 10 days

DISCOVER

VIEW

DOWNLOAD

Open & Free

ESSENTIAL MARINE VARIABLES

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with MyOcean Copernicus

marine.copernicus.eu

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with MyOcean Copernicus

marine.copernicus.eu

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with MyOcean Copernicus

• A single catalog with information produced and assessed by ocean experts, a reduction of unnecessary redundancy, a recognition of complementarities

• Standards for formats, QC, interoperability, service evolutions

• A free and open access to everyone for all data, advanced tools to facilitate access, high level reliability (> 96%)

• A group of operators committed for operations

QC

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What changes with MyOcean Copernicus

• A single catalog with information produced and assessed by ocean experts, a reduction of unnecessary redundancy, a recognition of complementarities

• Standards for formats, QC, interoperability, service evolutions

• A free and open access to everyone for all data, advanced tools to facilitate access, high level reliability (> 96%)

• A group of operators committed for operations

QC

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

What’s new?

• A focal point + a data policy + standards + commitments

– A focal point, devoted to ‘service-to-users’, enabling further synergies and partnerships

– A data policy, increasing value via data-sharing

– Standards, improving interoperability and cost efficiency

– Commitments, for service continuity and sustainability

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

SO WHAT?

what are the users feedbacks?

what have we learned ?

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

So what do users think of IMOS?

UPTAKE • Uptake and use is strong: 40% per

annum increase in science output • Assessed as high priority in four successive

competitive funding rounds • Attracting for international collaboration and partnership

with modeling and forecasting communities EXPECTATION • IMOS to be more active in the coastal zone LESSON • ensuring that adequate investment is made in quality control

Imos.org.au

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

So what do users think of NOS ?

DE Bay/River Pilots (S. Roberts) “prevent the safe passage of deep

loaded tankers before they are

scheduled to get underway.”

“[…] saving costs due to delays and aborted passages.”

NWS (B. Schneider, WFO Portland)

“Receiving accurate model output […] is central to WFO

Portland’s effort to improving forecasts for these areas”

oceanservice.noaa.gov

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48

So what do users think of MyOcean?

Number of users

Months

2719

1500

300

Fall 2009 Fall 2010 Fall 2011 Fall 2012 Sep 2013

a successful uptake: ~100 new registrations

every month

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore 26%

31% 12%

31%

Marine

safety

Marine & coastal

environment Climate seasonal &

weather forecasting

Marine

Resources

So what do users think of MyOcean?

A worldwide use, in different domains

Research

Public Business

Others 50%

20% 18%

12%

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

So what?

• A good uptake, and clear expectations

– Core services have found their users

– Users are asking for long-term sustainability,

service continuity and quality information

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

CONCLUSION

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

Conclusion

Operational oceanography is moving from successful R&D demonstrations to operational core services.

There are different types of core services, with different scopes, but they always come from a successful R&D

Core services in operation

• prove their capacity to meet users’ first expectations (simplify, deliver, assess, secure)

• are based on ‘public-good’ business models

• create value by securing a ‘network organization with a simple focal point’ for users

There is a lot to do, and

great expectations.

Sustainability is a key issue.

Symposium 2013

4-6 November 2013, Baltimore

Conclusion

Operational oceanography is moving from successful R&D demonstrations to operational core services.

There are different types of core services, with different scopes, but they always come from a successful R&D

Core services in operation

• prove their capacity to meet users’ first expectations (simplify, deliver, assess, secure)

• are based on ‘public-good’ business models

• create value by securing a ‘network organization with a simple focal point’ for users

There is a lot to do, and

great expectations.

Sustainability is a key issue.

Contact

[email protected]

Web sites

MyOcean: marine.copernicus.eu

IMOS: www.imos.gov.au

NOS: oceanservice.noaa.gov

See the posters!