IOC and its IODE Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Role of WMO in Natural Disaster Risk Reduction Ivan Obrusník, Czech Hydrometeorological Institute Role of WMO in Natural Disaster Risk Reduction Ivan Obrusník,
Advertisements

A Global Ocean Observing System in a Global Framework for Climate Services Albert Fischer Director a.i., GOOS Project Office, IOC/UNESCO 24 August 2011,
World Meteorological Organization Working together in weather, climate and water WMO OMM WMO GFCS Governance proposal Process of development.
Claudia Delgado OceanTeacher Academy OceanTeacher Academy Training Coordinator
World Meteorological Organization Working together in weather, climate and water Pilot Project V Integration of marine meteorological and other appropriate.
Near East Plant Protection Network for Regional Cooperation & Knowledge Sharing Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations An Overview on.
European Clearing-House Mechanism Portal Toolkit Expert Group Meeting
Potential role of WMO in Space Weather Jerome LAFEUILLE WMO Space Programme Office World Meteorological Organization Geneva.
Oceans in the UN and international arena The role of WMO WSIS, Geneva, 10 June
First Marine Board Forum – 15 May Oostende Marine Data Challenges: from Observation to Information UNESCO/IOC’s project.
Nairobi Convention Clearinghouse THE NAIROBI CONVENTION CLEARINGHOUSE AND INFORMATION SHARING SYSTEM 26 November-5 December 2007, Silver Springs, Nairobi,
Global Terrestrial Networks : The Hydrological Network.
The Role of IOC for Future Ocean Sang-Kyung Byun IOC Chairman World Ocean Forum 2011 Emerging SMART Ocean Industries 26 October 2011 BEXCO, Busan, Korea.
Школа-семинар для молодых ученых сентября 2008 г., «Ласпи», Севастополь Международный обмен океанографическими данными к.ф.-м.н. Владимиров В.Л.
World Meteorological Organization Working together in weather, climate and water Adaptation to Climate Change Impacts on Coastal Communities M.V.K. Sivakumar.
Recent developments in the UNFCCC process in relation to global observations 4 th GTOS Steering Committee Paris, 1-2 December 2009 Rocio Lichte Programme.
Team Leader- Hydrology
ODINAFRICA Ocean Data and Information Network for Africa.
Agricultural Biotechnology Network for Regional Collaboration and Knowledge Sharing Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations An Overview.
STRENGTHENING the AFRICA ENVIRONMENT INFORMATION NETWORK An AMCEN initiative A framework to support development planning processes and increase access.
2 slides…Not a problem Partnerships Each GFCS priority area has strong relationships with many institutions at many levels, but the engagement of WMO,
Data standardization and Data access Peter Pissierssens, Head, IOC project office for IODE, Oostende Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission Brussels,
International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange.
Global Action Plan and its implementation in other regions Meeting for Discussion of the draft Plan for the Implementation of the Global Strategy to Improve.
1 The IODE Ocean Data Portal - current status and future Nikolai Mikhailov, Chair of IODE/JCOMM ETDMP National Oceanographic Data Centre, Russia Four Session.
Towards a Tsunami Warning and Mitigation System in the Indian Ocean IOC of UNESCO.
34 th IAMSLIC Conference, September, Suva Fiji Access to Pacific marine information for the Pacific Islands Countries and Territories Panel Discussion.
IODE Ocean Data Portal - technological framework of new IODE system Dr. Sergey Belov, et al. Partnership Centre for the IODE Ocean Data Portal MINCyT,
Joint WMO-IOC Technical Commission for Oceanography and Marine Meteorology Contributions to WIGOS David Meldrum, vice chair, JCOMM OPA.
1 Ocean Sciences Section Third SCOR Summit of International Marine Research Projects How is the IOC OSS working with large scale ocean research projects?
Establishment of Monitoring Marine Observing System Presentation submitted to the Conference “Egyptian Coasts,…Problems and Solutions”, “As National Awareness.
IODE Ocean Data Portal – from data access to integration platform Sergey Belov, Tobias Spears, Nikolai Mikhailov International Oceanographic Data and Information.
International Argo structure Argo TC M. Belbeoch Accra, Ghana.
IODE : a new era. IODE-XVI Lisbon, 31 October – 8 November participants from 37 countries.
What is GEO? launched in response to calls for action by the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development, Earth Observation Summits, and by the G8 (Group.
Draft GEO Framework, Chapter 6 “Architecture” Architecture Subgroup / Group on Earth Observations Presented by Ivan DeLoatch (US) Subgroup Co-Chair Earth.
MEDIN Work Plan for By March 2011 MEDIN will be 3 years into the original 5 year development plan started in Would normally ask for continued.
Task NumberHarmonise, develop & implement capacity building Performance Indicators CB-07-01c Harmonise efforts by Tasks, in particular those related with.
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton European Way, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK Tel: National Marine Coordination Office.
Consultant Advance Research Team. Outline UNDERSTANDING M&E DATA NEEDS PEOPLE, PARTNERSHIP AND PLANNING 1.Organizational structures with HIV M&E functions.
Let’s Work Together to Achieve More IAMSLIC/IOC MOU Brainstorming Session 17 September, Suva Fiji.
On oceanographic Data Exchange The goal –Free, unrestricted and timely The reality –operational data collection –projects and campaigns Existing tools.
GOOS/JCOMM Update and GODAE OceanView Long JIANG IOC/UNESCO 7 place de Fontenoy, SP 07, Paris 75352, France GOVST-5.
Ocean Data and Information Network for Africa Mika Odido Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO UNESCO Nairobi Office (Regional Office for.
E u r o p e a n C o m m i s s i o nCommunity Research Global Change and Ecosystems Malta, 27 January 2004 Alan Edwards EUROPEAN COMMISSION GMES – Implications.
International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange - Ocean Data Portal (IODE ODP) Enabling science through seamless and open access to marine data.
International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange (IODE) By Peter Pissierssens, IODE Programme Coordinator.
Digital Asset Management Linda Pikula Anthony D. Smith Ocean Teacher Academy Training Course, 30 September - 4 October 2013, Mombasa, Kenya.
Let’s Work Together to Achieve More Proposal for Future Cooperation between IAMSLIC and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC)
Claudia Delgado, Training Coordinator IOC Project Office for IODE, Oostende, Belgium OceanTeacher Academy Preservation of Books and Other Media Training.
Importance of Oceanography Oceanography is the study of the ocean, including its physical, chemical, geological, and biological aspects.
IODE Ocean Data Portal - technological framework of new IODE system Dr. Sergey Belov, et al. Partnership Centre for the IODE Ocean Data Portal.
Implementing the New JCOMM Marine Climate Data System (MCDS)
S. Grimes, WMO Marine Meteorology and Affairs Division
OceanDocs Digital Repository of Marine Science Research Outputs
Ocean Data and Information Network for Africa (ODINAFRICA-III)
JCOMM in-situ Observations Programme Support Centre www. jcommops
OceanTeacher OBIS Nodes Technical Training Course Ward Appeltans UNESCO, Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC-UNESCO) International Oceanographic.
Becoming an OBIS Node.
Distributed Marine Data System:
IOC’s Ocean Data and Information Management programmes in Africa
SeaDataNet 2 First Training Session
Item 16.3 Governance review
JCOMM in-situ Observations Programme Support Centre www. jcommops
Contributions to WIGOS David Meldrum, vice chair, JCOMM OCG
Coordinating Operational Oceanography and Marine Meteorology
The GOOS and GCOS partnership
JCOMM in-situ Observations Programme Support Centre www. jcommops
The Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) of UNESCO:
Status and Plan of Regional WIGOS Center (West Asia) in
Presentation transcript:

IOC and its IODE Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange IOC and its IODE Peter Pissierssens IODE Programme Coordinator IOC of UNESCO

IOC IOC: body within UNESCO Headquarters in Paris, France Field Offices (Colombia, Brazil, Thailand, Kenya, Denmark, Belgium, Australia) IOC Governing Bodies 136 Member States

About the IOC The IOC was created in 1960 to promote international cooperation and coordinate programmes in research, sustainable development, protection of the marine environment, capacity-building for improved management, and decision-making. It assists developing countries in strengthening their institutions to obtain self-driven sustainability in marine sciences. On a regional level, it is coordinating the development of tsunami early warning and mitigation systems in the Pacific, the Indian Ocean, the North-eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean, and the Caribbean. It also facilitates interagency coordination through the UN-Oceans mechanism and works with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) in establishing a process for global reporting and assessment of the state of the marine environment + AoA Through the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS)—the ocean component of the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS)—the IOC helps improve operational oceanography, weather and climate forecasts and monitoring and support the sustained observing needs of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). AoA: regular process for the global reporting and assessment of the state of the marine environment, including socio-economic aspects

2008-2013 High-Level Objectives and Associated Activities Prevention and reduction of the impacts of natural hazards Mitigation of the impacts and adaptation to climate change and variability Safeguarding the health of ocean ecosystems Management procedures and policies leading to the sustainability of coastal and ocean environment and resources (Resolution EC-XXXIX.1)

IOC Programmes 4 main programmes/sections: Ocean Science: Oceans and Climate-related research and assessment (WCRP. IOCCP, OOPC); Coastal Research monitoring and modelling (HAB, GLOBEC); Science for integrated coastal area management (ICAM) Ocean Observations and Services: observation of the global ocean and coastal seas (GOOS); integrated marine observations and services (JCOMM), sea level science and observations; oceanographic data and information management (IODE) Tsunami Coordination Unit Capacity Development of Member States in marine science for the coastal ocean GLOBEC (Global Ocean Ecosystem Dynamics) IOCCP International Ocean Carbon Coordination Project JCOMM Joint WMO-IOC Technical Commission on Oceanography and Marine Meteorology

IOC Governance/structure Secondary Subsidiary Bodies Primary Subsidiary Bodies Governing Bodies IOC Assembly/ Executive Council Scientific and/or Technical Committees Task Team Group of Experts Sub-Commissions Regional Committees Joint Subsidiary Bodies 1 Chairman, 5 vice-chairs, 1 exec secretary

IOC Governance/structure Secondary Subsidiary Bodies Primary Subsidiary Bodies Governing Bodies IOC Assembly/ Executive Council Scientific and/or Technical Committees Task Team Group of Experts Sub-Commissions Regional Committees Joint Subsidiary Bodies Resolution (decision) recommendation recommendation

IOC Secretariat

IOC Secretariat

IOC budget and staff All staff 50 All Professional staff 31 Permanent professional staff 9 TOTAL 2008: APPROX. 13.4 M$

IOC Programmes 4 main programmes/sections: Ocean Science: Oceans and Climate-related research and assessment (WCRP. IOCCP, OOPC); Coastal Research monitoring and modelling (HAB, GLOBEC); Science for integrated coastal area management (ICAM) Ocean Observations and Services: observation of the global ocean and coastal seas (GOOS); integrated marine observations and services (JCOMM), sea level science and observations; oceanographic data and information management (IODE) Tsunami Coordination Unit Capacity Development of Member States in marine science for the coastal ocean GLOBEC (Global Ocean Ecosystem Dynamics) IOCCP International Ocean Carbon Coordination Project JCOMM Joint WMO-IOC Technical Commission on Oceanography and Marine Meteorology

IODE Established in 1961 ‘to enhance marine research, exploitation and development by facilitating the exchange of oceanographic data and information between participating Member States and by meeting the needs of users for data and information products’

IODE: global network Data centres: NODC Marine Libraries Now 80 (~) Marine Libraries National coordinators (DM & IM) Long-term archival through ICSU WDCs Let us now have a closer look at IODE. As I said before the International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange Programme was established in 1961 and in fact is the oldest programme within the IOC. Over the past 45 years IODE has developed into a global network of 64 national oceanographic data centres in as many countries around the world. As you can see in this map geographic coverage is now fairly homogenous including most coastal countries. Every year we have one or more countries joining the network. In addition to the NODCs there are also 3 World Data Centres Oceanography (in the United States, Russia and China) and 1 World Data Centre for Marine Environmental Sciences (in Germany). The World Data Center (WDC) system was created by ICSU to archive and distribute data collected from the observational programs of the 1957-1958 International Geophysical Year. The WDC system now includes 52 Centers in 12 countries. Its holdings include a wide range of solar, geophysical, environmental, and human dimensions data. These data cover timescales ranging from seconds to millennia and they provide baseline information for research in many ICSU disciplines, especially for monitoring changes in the geosphere and biosphere—gradual or sudden, foreseen or unexpected, natural or man-made.

Objectives? to facilitate and promote the exchange of all marine data and information including metadata, products and information in real-time, near real time and delayed mode; to ensure the long term archival, management and services of all marine data and information; to promote the use of international standards, and develop or help in the development of standards and methods for the global exchange of marine data and information, using the most appropriate information management and information technology; to assist Member States to acquire the necessary capacity to manage marine data and information and become partners in the IODE network; and to support international scientific and operational marine programmes of IOC and WMO and their sponsor organisations with advice and data management services.

Data types? Traditionally focused on: physical oceanographic observations (CTD, current, wave, Argo,…) Chemical data (nutrients, carbon, oxygen,..) Some biological data (eg chlorophyl) Since 2000: special attention to biological and chemical data management (GE-BICH) 1960-1990: delayed-mode >1990: GOOS: gradual move to also real-time

Strategy July 2007: IOC Assembly adopts the IOC Strategic Plan for Oceanographic Data and Information Management “A comprehensive and integrated ocean data and information system, serving the broad and diverse needs of IOC Member States, for both routine and scientific use.”

Deliverables: Assembled, quality controlled and archived data on a diverse range of variables according to scientifically sound and well-documented standards and formats; Timely dissemination of data on a diverse range of variables (observations and model outputs) depending on the needs of user groups and their technical capabilities (automatic dissemination as well as “on demand”); and will Facilitate easy discovery and access to data on a diverse range of variables and derived products (including forecasts, alerts and warnings) by users who have a broad range of capabilities. .

Elements Adherence to the IOC Oceanographic Data Exchange Policy; Acceptance and implementation of agreed interoperability arrangements including technical standards and specifications for processing, quality control, storing and disseminating shared data and information; A global network of data centres and related national distributed networks, and permanent long term data archiving centre(s) for all data, which operate to agreed standards, providing seamless access to data and information; Capacity building through continued development of Ocean Data and Information Networks (ODINs) whilst extending the OceanTeacher capacity building tool through cooperation with WMO, JCOMM and others as appropriate; Governance by an Advisory Group that brings together the various programme elements of IOC as well as of bodies and organizations collaborating closely with IOC.

Advisory Group linkages

2000: JCOMM The Joint WMO-IOC Technical Commission for Oceanography and Marine Meteorology Close cooperation with IODE and WMO (2007)

IODE Ocean Data Portal Within the oceanographic community, although there are still improvements to be made, the global archiving of some of the individual streams of data is not bad. There are consistent ways to manage profiling float data, or surface drifters, current meter data, or satellite data, etc. But what we do not have is a consistent and unified way to deliver the data to researchers, modellers or anyone else. One way we can look at this is to draw a parallel with the commercial world, in particular banking. A target for what our data delivery system should be like could be the ATM system. By identifying yourself to an ATM, you can carry out a limited number of financial transactions and in many if not all places in the world. We want an “Oceanographic or Marine Data ATM”. This will connect data assembly centres to data users wherever they exist in the world. 2015 target: Consistent and unified way to deliver data to clients

Participate! Why? Expose catalogue of your national researchers data Make available your national researchers data Promote your country’s research work Actively contribute to global programmes How? Install data provider software Use Light Data Provider

Data Policy Clause 1: Member States shall provide timely, free and unrestricted access to all data, associated metadata and products generated under the auspices of IOC programmes. Clause 2: Member States are encouraged to provide timely, free and unrestricted access to relevant data and associated metadata from non-IOC programmes that are essential for application to the preservation of life, beneficial public use and protection of the ocean environment, the forecasting of weather, the operational forecasting of the marine environment, the monitoring and modelling of climate and sustainable development in the marine environment. Clause 3: Member States are encouraged to provide timely, free and unrestricted access to oceanographic data and associated metadata, as referred to in Clauses 1 and 2 above, for non-commercial use by the research and education communities, provided that any products or results of such use shall be published in the open literature without delay or restriction Clause 4: With the objective of encouraging the participation of governmental and non-governmental marine data-gathering bodies in international oceanographic data exchange and maximising the contribution of oceanographic data from all sources, this Policy acknowledges the right of Member States and data originators to determine the terms of such exchange, in a manner consistent with international conventions, where applicable. Clause 5: Member States shall, to the best practicable degree, use data centres linked to IODE’s NODC and WDC network as long-term repositories for oceanographic data and associated metadata. IOC programmes will co-operate with data contributors to ensure that data can be accepted into the appropriate systems and can meet quality requirements. Clause 6: Member States shall enhance the capacity in developing countries to obtain and manage oceanographic data and information and assist them to benefit fully from the exchange of oceanographic data, associated metadata and products. This shall be achieved through the non-discriminatory transfer of technology and knowledge using appropriate means, including IOC’s Training Education and Mutual Assistance (TEMA) programme and through other relevant IOC programmes. .

IOC Governance/structure Secondary Subsidiary Bodies Primary Subsidiary Bodies Governing Bodies IOC Assembly/ Executive Council Scientific and/or Technical Committees Task Team Group of Experts Sub-Commissions Regional Committees Joint Subsidiary Bodies 1 Chairman, 5 vice-chairs, 1 exec secretary

IOC Governance/structure Secondary Subsidiary Bodies Primary Subsidiary Bodies Governing Bodies IOC Assembly/ Executive Council Scientific and/or Technical Committees IODE Task Team Group of Experts Sub-Commissions Regional Committees Joint Subsidiary Bodies 1 Chairman, 5 vice-chairs, 1 exec secretary

IODE Structure Projects are managed by Steering Groups IODE Groups of Experts Chair SG-OBIS IODE Committee GE-OBIS 1 Chair ODINs are managed by Steering Committees Officers = 2 co-chairs - past chair chairs of GEs - Chair JCOMM DMCG (With proposed amendment for OBIS, November 2009)

IODE activities 20 projects at global level: Data management: GODAR, GTSPP. GOSUD, JCOMM, MarineXML, MEDI, Ocean Data Portal, WIGOS, Virtual Lab, Data Publishing, Data Standards Information management: OceanDocs, ASFA, OceanExpert, OpenScienceDirectory 7 regional platforms: ODINAFRICA, ODINCARSA, ODINCINDIO, ODINECET, ODIN-PIMRIS, ODIN-WESTPAC, ODINBlackSea Regional products: AMA, CMA

IODE “Capacity Building” ODIN strategy Linking training, equipment, operational support Regional context Product and service oriented Multi-stakeholder approach Strong focus on inter-personal and institutional networking Strong focus on E2E process: from observation to product delivery Focus on data AND information ODINCARSA

Regions: ODIN

Training Tool: OceanTeacher Expert and training resource for marine data and information management Focus audience: data/information managers ocean researchers University students Increasing focus on continuous professional development New service: OceanTeacher Multimedia www.oceanteacher.org Integrated Expert and Training System for Oceanographic Data and Information Management To provide in a single integrated e-learning and expert system providing all the expert and training resources for marine data management and marine information management needed by professional ocean data and information managers and scientists involved in data management, as well as to provide ocean researchers and students with the necessary knowledge to interact effectively with their national oceanographic data centres

“Binary” model Digital Library Classroom

IOC Project Office for IODE International Training and Conference Centre Based in Ostend, Belgium Major funding Gov Flanders Host IODE OceanDataPortal

IOC Project Office for IODE About 10-15 events per year, half training courses Each training course: 15-20 students Biggest course: 70 students (SeaDataNet)

OceanTeacher Academy New project: 2009-2013 Annual assessment of needs (survey of Member States) “Packaged” courses: ready-to-teach Classroom courses (+ train the trainer) Distance learning: live or recorded (2009-) We need content providers and lecturers!

Thank you