BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar We cannot manage what we do not measure: Martin Kramp - JCOMMOPS Ship Coordinator
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar JCOMMOPS, UN and GOOS Meteorology Oceanography Mixed Commission Support Center
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Remote Areas: How do we get more Data?
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Limits of Repeat Hydrographic Cruises
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Limits of Commercial Shipping
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar A World’s First: Do it in a RACE!
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar A World’s First: Do it in a RALLY!
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar International program coordinating the use of autonomous data buoys to observe atmospheric and oceanographic conditions. Drifting and moored buoys that measure air pressure, sea surface temperature, salinity, ocean current velocity, air temperature, humidity, wave characteristics and wind velocity across all oceans. Aiming to increase the quantity, quality, global coverage and timeliness of atmospheric and oceanographic data. DBCP
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar DBCP: Video Jimmy Cornell
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Deployment Values: Blue is what we need
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Argo (Video) A revolutionary achievement for subsurface observations An unprecedented cooperative effort in the history of oceanography A crucial mechanism to better understand the warming of the upper ocean An essential data for the new generation of numerical models, allowing forecasts
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Volunteer Ships: SOT The JCOMM Ship Observations Team (SOT) coordinates: The Voluntary Observing Ships (VOS) Scheme, which uses every month ~2000 mostly commercial ships to gather and distribute meteorological observations in near-real-time to shore, for immediate use by weather forecasting services. The Automated Shipboard Aerological Programme (ASAP), operating mostly on ships participating in VOS, and using radiosondes tethered to gas-filled balloons to sample the atmosphere from the surface to a height of about 30km. The Ship-of-Opportunity Programme (SOOP), collecting along repeat lines at regular intervals notably thermal data in the top 1000m of the oceans by expendable probes, known commonly as XBTs, mostly from VOS ships. The data are used for operational and scientific purposes. SOT vessels are often also used for the deployment of autonomous instruments (floats, drifters) at sea.
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar SOT: TurboWin Demo, Video
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Your contribution on the WWW
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Deployments on Delivery Cruises
BPO Science Program14 December 2014Webiinar Thank You…. And Good Luck! Contact: Martin Kramp Phone: