Ocean Policy Activities and Ocean Observatories Ocean Observatories Dr. Robert Gagosian President and CEO MACOORA November 17, 2009.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
John A. Orcutt Deputy Director, SIO Ocean Observations Initiative NSF MREFC Chair, NSF/CORE DEOS Comm.
Advertisements

Coastal Management Act 2009 A New Constitution for the Coast.
The National Water Quality Monitoring Network for U.S. Coastal Waters and their Tributaries National Water Quality Monitoring Council October 31, 2006.
NOAA West and West Coast Governors’ Agreement on Ocean Health PaCOOS Board Meeting May 16-17, 2007 PaCOOS Board Meeting May 16-17, 2007.
National Policy for Stewardship of the Ocean, Our Coasts, and the Great Lakes Michael Weiss Deputy Associate Director Ocean and Coastal Policy Council.
NOAA Science Advisory Board The U.S. Climate Change Science Program Strategic Plan James R. Mahoney, Ph.D. Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and.
1 Preparing Washington for a Changing Climate An Integrated Climate Change Response Strategy Department of Ecology Hedia Adelsman, Executive Policy Advisor.
Jerry L. Miller, Ph.D. Assistant Director for Ocean Sciences White House Office of Science and Technology Policy MARACOOS Washington, DC
1 IOOS Status of Planning & Implementation Background –Milestones Implementation Plan, Part I –Governance of the IOOS Implementation Plan, Part II –The.
Welcome MACOORA Annual Meeting October 22-23, 2008 Fall River, Massachusetts Carolyn Thoroughgood.
USGS Realignment, Science Planning, and FY 2012 Budget Matthew C. Larsen Associate Director Climate and Land Use Change U.S. Department of the Interior.
The National Office for Integrated and Sustained Ocean Observing and Prediction Eric J. Lindstrom, Director, Ocean.US Worth D. Nowlin, Jr, U.S. GOOS Steering.
NOAA Climate Program – An Update NOAA Science Advisory Board March 19, 2003 NOAA Science Advisory Board March 19, 2003 Mary M. Glackin NOAA Assistant Administrator.
Advisory Committee on Water Information 2005 Interim Status September 14, 2005 USGS National Center Auditorium.
Slide: 1 27 th CEOS Plenary |Montréal | November 2013 Agenda Item: 15 Chu ISHIDA(JAXA) on behalf of Rick Lawford, GEO Water CoP leader GEO Water.
Office of Science & Technology Policy Executive Office of the President The National Climate Assessment Version 3.0 Kathy Jacobs Assistant Director for.
The U.S. Climate Change Science Program Dr. James R. Mahoney Assistant Secretary for Oceans and Atmosphere Director, Climate Change Science Program.
National Water Quality Monitoring Network Design Alfred L. Korndoerfer, Jr. Karl Muessig.
HSRP Spring Meeting May 4, 2011 David M. Kennedy.
Washington, DC - Sunday, 7 February 2010 SAON Board Meeting :: January 2012 :: Tromsø, Norway United States Report to the SAON Board Martin Jeffries.
May 13, 2009 Marine Fisheries Advisory Committee: Regional Ocean Governance Mark C. Holliday, Ph.D. Office of Policy.
Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning Debra Hernandez, SECOORA Walter Johnson, BOEMRE Ru Morrison, NERACOOS Charly Alexander, IOOS Office.
Update on the U.S. Climate Change Science Program UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Subsidiary Body Meeting June 21, 2004 Linda V. Moodie Senior.
US Climate Change Science Program Incorporating the US Global Change Research Program and the Climate Change Research Initiative U.S. Climate Change Science.
Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force Interim Report Proposed Governance Structure Review Peter Hill October 13, 2009.
Gulf of Mexico Alliance SIMOR Briefing June 9, 2009.
The West Coast Governors’ Agreement on Ocean Health Jessica Hamilton Keys Natural Resources Policy Advisor Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski Hydrographic.
Alternative Energy on the Outer Continental Shelf Robert P. LaBelle Deputy Associate Director Offshore Energy and Minerals Management Minerals Management.
Progress on Coordinating CBP and Federal Leadership Goals, Outcomes, and Actions Principals’ Staff Committee Meeting 2/16/12 Carin Bisland, Associate Director.
The Science Requirements for Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning Dr. Robert B. Gagosian President and CEO Ocean Studies Board November 10, 2009.
Josie Quintrell, NFRA Executive Director October, 2010 MACOORA Board Meeting.
The Role of Science in a National Ocean Policy Dr. Robert B. Gagosian President and CEO Ocean Studies Board November 10, 2009.
Zdenka Willis Briefing to GCOOS March 4, 2010 US IOOS Update.
Ocean.US and Coastal Ocean Applications and Science Team (COAST) Larry Atkinson September 2004 Corvallis.
Presenters: David M. Kennedy, Director, NOAA Office of Ocean & Coastal Resource Management Margaret A. Davidson, Director, NOAA Coastal Services Center.
National Ocean Policy and Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning Presented to Recreational Fishing Working Group MAFAC April 13, 2011.
Science Advisory Board Public Session 1 1 Peter Schultz, Ph.D. Associate Director for Science Integration Climate Change Science Program Office CCSP Update.
Tony MacDonald Director Urban Coast Institute Monmouth University November 30, 2009.
INTEGRATED ARCTIC MANAGEMENT Brendan P. Kelly Assistant Director for Polar Sciences Office of Science and Technology Policy
UNCLASS1 Dr. Gene Whitney Assistant Director for Environment Office of Science and Technology Policy Executive Office of the President WISP Meeting - July.
1 NOAA Priorities for an Ecosystem Approach to Management A Presentation to the NOAA Science Advisory Board John H. Dunnigan NOAA Ecosystem Goal Team Lead.
The Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) is envisioned as a coordinated national and international network of observations, data management and analyses.
State Perspectives on Coastal and Ocean Management A Review of A Review of Coastal States Organization’s Recommendations to the US Commission on Ocean.
The Science Requirements for Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning Dr. Robert B. Gagosian President and CEO September 24, 2009.
Supporting Community Participation in U.S. Arctic Ocean Governance Strengthening Institutions Strategies for Cooperative Management in the Marine Environment.
IOOS Regional Data Management Workshop April 27 & 28, 2011 Silver Spring, MD COLLABORATION TO DATE Charles Alexander 1, Jeff de La Beaujardière 1, Arthur.
American Fisheries Society Incoming Governing Board Breakfast Scott Rayder Chief of Staff National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration September 15,
NSF ANNUAL REVIEW June 2010 Ocean Observatories Initiative Matthew Arrott August Release 1 Life Cycle Architecture Review CI Project Status.
Cyberinfrastructure R3 Life Cycle Objectives Review January 8-9, 2013 Ocean Observatories Initiative CI Release 3 Life Cycle Objectives Review Charge to.
California Water Plan Update Advisory Committee Meeting January 20, 2005.
Deerin Babb-Brott, Director National Ocean Council Office National Boating Federation 2013 Annual Meeting.
NOAA Climate Program Office Richard D. Rosen Senior Advisor for Climate Research CICS Science Meeting College Park, MD September 9, 2010.
U N I T E D S T A T E S D E P A R T M E N T O F C O M M E R C E N A T I O N A L O C E A N I C A N D A T M O S P H E R I C A D M I N I S T R A T I O N.
NOAA EDMC Ocean Observatories Initiative Cyberinfrastructure Karen Stocks OOI CI Data Curator University of California, San Diego Ocean Observatories.
EPOPf Workshop Portland, OR, Sep 20-22, 2010 Ocean Observatories Initiative OOI Moored and Autonomous Arrays Ed Dever
NOAA Council on Long-Term Climate Monitoring (CLTCM) Presentation to NOAA Science Advisory Board November 5 – 7, 2002 Chair: Tom Karl Executive Secretary:
1 NOAA STRATEGY FOR REVIEW OF THE REPORTS OF THE U.S. COMMISSION ON OCEAN POLICY and the PEW OCEANS COMMISSION Lee Dantzler, Deputy Chair NOAA Ocean Council.
U N I T E D S T A T E S D E P A R T M E N T O F C O M M E R C E N A T I O N A L O C E A N I C A N D A T M O S P H E R I C A D M I N I S T R A T I O N Interagency.
U N I T E D S T A T E S D E P A R T M E N T O F C O M M E R C E N A T I O N A L O C E A N I C A N D A T M O S P H E R I C A D M I N I S T R A T I O N Advancing.
Using Analysis and Tools to Inform Adaptation and Resilience Decisions -- the U.S. national experiences Jia Li Climate Change Division U.S. Environmental.
National Ocean Council Regional Planning Body Overview
President’s Report Robert B. Gagosian October 15, 2009
Ocean Observatories Initiative
Ocean Policy Activities
Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force Interim Report and Next Steps
Unidata Policy Committee Meeting
Charting the Course for Ocean Science in the United States:
United States Report to the SAON Board Martin Jeffries
Policy Update Kevin Wheeler March 11, 2010
INTEGRATED ARCTIC MANAGEMENT
Presentation transcript:

Ocean Policy Activities and Ocean Observatories Ocean Observatories Dr. Robert Gagosian President and CEO MACOORA November 17, 2009

National Ocean Policy “We will restore science to its rightful place” – President Barack Obama, January 20, 2009 On June 12, 2009, President Obama issued a memorandum to establish an Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force with the charge to establish a National Ocean Policy and recommend a framework for effective coastal and marine spatial planning. A national policy “established, guided and continuously validated by science” that ensures protection, maintenance, and restoration of oceans, our coasts and the Great Lakes.

June 12 th Memorandum 90 Days National Ocean Policy Governance Framework Priority Areas 180 Day Marine Spatial Planning Framework

Policy Emphasis on Stewardship 1. Healthy and Resilient Ocean, Coasts, and Great Lakes 2. Safe and Productive Ocean, Coasts, and Great Lakes 3. Understood and Treasured Ocean, Coasts, and Great Lakes

Principles 1.Ecosystem-Based Management 2.Protect, Maintain and Restore 3.Minimize adverse environmental impacts 4.Best Available Science 5.Precautionary Approach

Report Focus: How We Do Business Ecosystem-Based Management Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning Inform Decisions and Improve Understanding Coordinate and Support

Report Focus: Areas of Special Emphasis Resiliency and Adaptation to Climate Change and Ocean Acidification Regional Ecosystem Protection and Restoration Water Quality and Sustainable Practices on Land Changing Conditions in the Arctic Ocean, Coastal, and Great Lakes Observations and Infrastructure

Ocean Leadership’s Participation Invited to present 2 formal lectures to the OPTF: –Role of Science in Ocean Policy –Science Requirements for Marine Spatial Planning Participant in 4 Stakeholder Discussions including Ocean and Human Health roundtable Developed 2 policy documents: –Deciphering the Ocean Climate System –Science Requirements for Marine Spatial Planning Submitted comments and recommendations to the OPTF on the above topics

Science Priorities for a National Ocean Policy Changes in Ocean Productivity Opening of the Arctic System Forecasting and Adapting to Sea Level Rise Observing System Requirements –Research Priorities –Remote Sensing Priorities –In Situ Sensing Priorities

Major Science Issues for MSP Marine environment much more dynamic than terrestrial systems (three dimensional, biology- driven, fluid environment). Impacted by climate change, so future conditions increasingly difficult to predict just using historical data. Significant gaps of information exist in basic science which need to be addressed in order to evaluate outcomes. Multiple Agencies with varying missions, regulations and monitoring exist without a comprehensive plan for managing, integrating, and delivering products and services for MSP.

Ocean Leadership MSP Science Requirements Implementation and prioritization of MSP science requirements will be regional and goal- specific. Conduct Regional Ecosystem Assessments Support Continuity of Funding for Observations Data Integration and Cyber Infrastructure

MSP Science Requirements (continued) Implementation and prioritization of MSP science requirements will be regional and goal-specific. However, there are some basic observation requirements –Physical – temperature, salinity, bathymetry, currents –Geochemical – pH, oxygen, nutrients, water quality, dissolved carbon –Biological – chlorophyll, pathogens, population and diversity information

MSP Science Requirements (continued) There are other use-specific high priority informational needs (e.g. avian migration, wind fields for siting wind farms) Observations must be coupled with process studies for ecosystem assessments to be accurate. Data from various observing systems must be integrated into models, forecasts and other products for planners and resource managers.

Examples of Existing Federal Observing & Modeling Programs Integrated Ocean Observing System – Multiple Agencies Ocean Observatories Initiative - NSF National Data Buoy Center - NOAA Ocean Biological Information System – USGS PORTS – NOAA NMFS Surveys - NOAA Oil Platform Data – MMS Stream Flow – USGS Stormwater - EPA Remote Sensing Data – NOAA/NASA

Examples of Existing Federal Observing & Modeling Programs Issues which need to be addressed: 1. The compatibility and sustainability of these systems 2. Data integration and dissemination 3. Management and integration of their budgets

An interactive ocean laboratory integrated by a leading-edge, multi-scalar cyberinfrastructure. Open data policy Near real time Interactive Scalable Data provenance

Design Elements 4 Global scale sites 3 Regional cabled sites in the NE Pacific Coastal scale arrays: Mid-Atlantic Pioneer Array, PNW Endurance Array Each scale incorporates mobile assets Cyberinfrastructure: enable adaptive sampling, custom observatory view, collaborative analysis Interfaces for education users

Regional Scale Nodes Power and Bandwidth from seafloor cable Instrumented nodes on Juan de Fuca plate

Global Arrays Fixed and mobile assets Extended duration Surface to near bottom water column coverage Mesoscale footprint Irminger Sea Argentine Basin Southern Ocean Station PAPA*

OOI Project Team Coordination/Integration: Ocean Leadership Cyberinfrastructure: UC San Diego Coastal and Global-Scale: WHOI with OSU and SIO Regional Scale: University of Washington Education and Public Engagement: TBD

OOI Science Themes Ocean-Atmosphere Exchange Climate Variability, Ocean Circulation, and Ecosystems Turbulent Mixing and Biophysical Interactions Coastal Ocean Dynamics and Ecosystems Fluid-Rock Interactions and the Sub-seafloor Biosphere Plate-scale, Ocean Geodynamics Additional Science Foci Ocean ecosystem health Climate change Carbon cycling Ocean acidification

Getting Involved... Open data access Proposal process: –NSF standard merit review –Changes and/or additions to OOI Network will require additional technical guidance and information (feasibility assessments, facility usage, budgeting/scheduling, technical & cyberinfrastucture requirements, education, environmental, and security requirements). –NSF, OOI, UNOLS, U.S. Navy all involved in scheduling experiments and cruises

Community Participation in OOI OOI Advisory Committees –Program Advisory Committee –TBD subcommittees and/or working groups NSF Scientific Oversight Committee Annual Project reviews Community Science Workshops (Nov , 2009 and spring 2010) Future competitions for: –Pioneer Array location (3-5 year intervals) –Infrastructure Operations

Ocean Research Priorities Plan Refresh Initial ORPP release Jan 2007 “Refresh” initiated Spring 2009 Public comment period closed mid-July ORPP helped inform the content of priorities identified in the Task Force Interim Report Draft Refresh ORPP to be discussed at Town Halls –MTS/IEEE (October) –AGU (December) –Ocean Sciences Meeting (February 2010)

National Ocean Council Dual Level Council Principals Periodically Update and Set Priorities Provide Annual Direction on Implementation Dispute Resolution Deputy Level (NORLC) Oversight of Execution of Implementation Transmit Administration Priorities to Subcommittees Coordinate with other EOP Offices Guide and Receive Info from Advisory Bodies Dispute Resolution

NOC Steering Committee (4 Members) Chair CEQ Director OSTP One chair “each” Chair of Ocean Resource Management IPC Chair of Ocean Science and Technology IPC Functions Key Forum for Integration and Coordination on Priorities Areas within the NOC Ensure ORM & OST IPC Activities Fully Aligned Extended Continental Shelf Task Force reports to Steering Committee

Ocean Science and Technology Interagency Policy Committee Structure NSTC-JSOST serves as the OST-IPC Reports to NSTC/CENR Chairs appointed thru NSTC, in consultation with NOC DAS-Level Participation Function Ensure Interagency Implementation of National Policy Develop (update) ORPPIS Develop Charter, Strategic Plan –Approval by NSTC May Establish Sub-IPCs

Governance Advisory Committee (13 Members) (6) One From Each Region –Chosen by NOC in consultation with regional councils (2) At-Large From Inland States –chosen by NOC in consultation with NGA (3) Alaska, Pacific Islands, Caribbean –chosen by NOC in consultation with regional groups (2) At-Large Tribal Representatives –Chosen by NOC in consultation with Indian organization

Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel Existing Body (ORRAP) FACA Advisory Body to NORLC (Dep-Level NOC) Membership: To Be Reviewed Provide Independent Advice & Guidance to NOC Receive Guidance and Direction from NOC

Current Status Successful Preliminary Design Review, Dec 2007 Successful Final Design Review, Nov 2008 Design modification review, March 2009 National Science Board approval in May 2009 Funding identified FY09, ARRA; in FY10 request Construction phase started in Sept 2009