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NOAA IOOS
NOAA IOOS
John H. DunniganAssistant Administrator for Ocean Services and
Coastal Zone ManagementIOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry
August 6, 2007
John H. DunniganAssistant Administrator for Ocean Services and
Coastal Zone ManagementIOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry
August 6, 2007
Status, Vision, Challenges and the Role of Industry
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 2
OverviewOverview
Integrated Observing Systems GEOSS-GOOS OOI & IOOS
IOOS Vision and Mission IOOS Vision IOOS Mission
IOOS Update Federal collaborations to
implement IOOS How NOAA is implementing
IOOS Where NOAA is now
Existing U.S. National Capacity NOAA California example
Challenges Technical Program Budget
The Roles of Industry Providing Solutions National IOOS Perspective Summary
The View from Washington Funding Legislation
Summary
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 3
Global Earth Observation
System of Systems (GEOSS)
Global Earth Observation
System of Systems (GEOSS)
70 Member Countries & the European Commission
46 International Organizations
A distributed system of systems Improves coordination of strategies
and observation systems Links all platforms: in situ, aircraft,
and satellite networks Identifies gaps in our global capacity Facilitates exchange of data and
information Improves decision-makers’ abilities
to address pressing policy issues GOOS is the global ocean component
of GEOSS
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 5
Example of a regional observing system in
Monterey Bay, CA
U.S. IOOSVision
U.S. IOOSVision
Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS)
IOOS will enable rapid assessments of current states of marine and estuarine systems, and the timely detection and prediction of changes in them, through the continual provision of routine and reliable data and information in forms and at rates specified by the users.
U.S. IOOS is a complex undertaking that is dependent on federal, regional, state, local, academic, & private sector contributions
Provide the right information, in the right format, at the right time, to the right people, to make the right decisions.
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 6
NOAA’s IOOSMission
NOAA’s IOOSMission
“Lead the integration of ocean, coastal, and Great Lakes observing capabilities, in collaboration with Federal and non-federal partners, to maximize access to data and generation of information products to inform decision making and promote social, economic, and environmental benefit to our nation and the world.” Source: Draft NOAA IOOS
Strategic Plan
Example of an integrated ocean observation system
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 7
Federal Collaboration to Implement IOOS
Federal Collaboration to Implement IOOS
U.S. Ocean Action Plan Establishes mechanisms for
federal coordination and governance (COP, ICOSRMI, JSOST, SIMOR, etc.)
Identifies goal to build a global earth observation network, including integrated oceans observation
Ocean.US Federal agency coordination
through JSOST-IWGOO (EPA, USGS, MMS, USACOE, ONR, JCS, NOAA, NSF, USCG,MMC, USDA, USARC, FDA, NASA, DOS, DOE, DOT)
Development Plan Development Plan Addendum
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 8
How NOAA Is Implementing IOOS
How NOAA Is Implementing IOOS
NOAA IOOS Program Office Established Dedicated to administration of NOAA’s IOOS activities and
collaborating with external partners NOAA first federal agency to do this
Implementing Initial Operating Capability for Data Integration
Integrate 5 of 20 variables (temp., salinity, sea level, surface currents, ocean color)
Four data products (hurricane intensity, coastal inundation, harmful algae blooms, integrated, ecosystem assessments)
WORK PLANWORK PLAN
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 9
Where Are We?Where Are We?
Formed NOAA IOOS Program Lead and mange NOAA’s IOOS efforts;
Leadership in place, now hiring other staff Support external collaboration with partners
NOAA’s FY’08 Budget Request includes IOOS request
$ 14.0 Million (Regional obs., date mgmt., sensors)
Completed internal planning for the FY10-14 timeframe
Completed a draft NOAA IOOS Strategic Plan
Completed 5 interoperability tests to baseline data flows and conditions for our four thematic focus areas.
Implemented a merit based competition to support regional IOOS development (FY07 and FY08)
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 10
NOAA Funded IOOS National Capacity
NOAA Funded IOOS National Capacity
First U.S. IOOS Development Plan (2006) stresses the importance of capitalizing on what is already deployed in “in-the-water”
For NOAA this means focusing in integrating data from our existing systems (i.e., tide gauges, buoys)
The regional coastal ocean observation element has historically been funded through earmarks to NOAA. NOAA is transitioning to a competitive model.
Ports NWLON Geodesy – CORS Mussel Watch WX Buoys C-MAN Buoys NERR Sites
ACT
COOA
CORMP
Caro-COOPS
CI-CORE
Gulf of AK Ecosystem Monitoring/AOOS
OASIS
LISICOS
SCCOOS
GoMOOS
Joint Ocean Obs. Tech. Ctr.
CenGOOS
OrCOOS
CIMT
SCOOP
FY 2006
Sample of NOAA’s Operational Observing Capability
NOAA Funded Sub-Regional Coastal Ocean
Observing System Elements
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 11
U.S. IOOS CapacityCalifornia ExampleU.S. IOOS CapacityCalifornia Example
State of California taking a leadership role in creation of regional observing systems.
In 2002 passed $21M in bonds to fund the CA Ocean Currents Monitoring Program (COCMP)
Pacific Coast Ocean Observing System (PaCOOS) is developing an ecological component to IOOS for ecosystem based management
The proposed buildout of high frequency radar (HFR) in CA to monitor surface currents.
Pacific Coast Ocean Observing System
(PaCOOS)
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 12
IOOS ChallengesIOOS Challenges
Technical Not easy to integrate data from many
sources Need to provide data in formats and rates
that are useful for broad array of applications
Program IOOS is not “owned” by 1 agency or entity Difficult to engineer a cohesive and operation
system with many stakeholders that contribute to and use the system
Budget Fiscal constraints always an issue (no one
agency can do it all) Coordinating federal budget requests across
agencies is not typical and not easy Moving from earmarks to merit based awards IOOS Observation Registry -
many data sources from around the U.S.
Example of ocean and coastal observation data.
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 13
The Roles of Industry
Providing Solutions
The Roles of Industry
Providing Solutions
Successful business can be built upon providing innovative solutions to project challenges
Program solutions Linking OOI and IOOS Innovative Research and Technology
Transfer
Technical Solutions Still in period of discovery and face
technical challenges IT engineering services Commercial applications development
Budget NOAA knows industry can help How do we build a cohesive system with
exiting resources? How can we leverage funded efforts
underway in the private sector?
Disasters
Health
Energy
ClimateWater
Weather
Transportation
Agriculture
Biodiversity
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 14
The Role of Industry
National IOOS Perspective
The Role of Industry
National IOOS Perspective
Its essential that Industry be fully integrated in the planning, implementation, and operation of the U.S. IOOS
Develop strategies for value-added commercial applications and services, technology transfer, and operations and maintenance of the national IOOS.
Consider Industry perspectives through representation at Ocean.US and through active engagement at industry workshops and forums
NOAA encourages the private sector to collaborate with regional entities to respond to our competitive federal funding announcements.
Ask for your help in strategizing and thinking about ways to strengthen existing and build new connections.
Surfline uses oceanographic data to forecast surf conditions around the world
NOAA’s PORTS® provides real-time oceanographic data for 13 ports (6 more this year)
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 15
IOOSThe View from Washington
IOOSThe View from Washington
Budget
FY’08 Administration request includes $14M for IOOS
$2.5 M for implementation of data mgmt. and communications
$11.5 M for regional observations
FY’08 Senate CJS Mark - $47 M $8 M for program development,
date mgmt., communications, and grant administration
$29 M for competitive regional observation systems
$10 M for National data mgmt. and comm. Center
FY’08 House CJS Mark - $14 M (matches Pres. Request)
Legislation
S. 950: report out of Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee
H.2337 report out of the House Natural Resources Committee
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 16
SummarySummary
IOOS is maturing, but more work needed to evolve IOOS into a fully operational system.
As the U.S. IOOS moves to implementation, the potential roles of industry are expected to grow.
NOAA encourages the private sector to collaborate with regional entities to respond to our competitive federal funding announcements.
Symposia such as this are vitally important for exchanging ideas and translating the best ideas into action.
NOAA IOOS
NOAA IOOS
John H. DunniganAssistant Administrator for Ocean Services and
Coastal Zone ManagementIOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry
August 6, 2007
John H. DunniganAssistant Administrator for Ocean Services and
Coastal Zone ManagementIOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry
August 6, 2007
Status, Vision, Challenges and the Role of Industry
Thank YouThank You
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 18
Ocean Action Plan
FY’08 President Budget Increases over FY’07
Ocean Action Plan
FY’08 President Budget Increases over FY’07
Ocean Science and Research $60Ocean Research Priorities Plan Implementation $20.0Integrated Ocean Observing System $16.4Vessel Time and Equipment for Ocean Science $9.0Mapping the Extended Continental Shelf $8.0Saltonstall-Kennedy Competitive Fisheries Research Grants (mandatory funds)
$3.5
Right Whales Research $2.0Ocean Health Initiative $1.0International Polar Year—Marine survey in the Antarctic $0.6
Protecting and Restoring Sensitive Marine and Coastal Areas
$38
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands National Marine Monument $8.0Penobscot River Restoration $10.0Coastal and Estuarine Land Conservation $15.0Gulf of Mexico Collaboration $5.0
Ensuring Sustainable Use of Ocean Resources $25Magnuson Stevens Implementation $20.2Aquaculture $3.0Marine Mammals and Sound $1.8
NOAA Total $123Support Implementation of Ocean Research Priorities Plan - NSF/DOI $20Total $143
($ in Millions)
IOOS-OOI Symposium: The Role of Industry 19
Ocean Action Plan
FY’08 President Budget Increases over FY’07
Ocean Action Plan
FY’08 President Budget Increases over FY’07
Ocean Science and Research $60Protecting and Restoring Sensitive Marine and Coastal Areas
$38
Ocean Research Priorities Plan ImplementationNorthwestern Hawaiian Islands National Marine Monument
$8.0
Coastal Decision Support $5.0 Penobscot River Restoration $10.0Develop sensors for rapid toxin detection (HABs)
$5.0 Coastal and Estuarine Land Conservation $15.0
Ocean Circulation and Climate $5.0 Gulf of Mexico Collaboration $5.0Comparative Analysis of Marine Ecosystems $5.0
Integrated Ocean Observing SystemEnsuring Sustainable Use of Ocean Resources
$25
IOOS-Regional Observations$11.
5Magnuson Stevens Implementation
NOAA-Data management and coordination $2.5 Reauthorization—new requirements $6.5IOOS-Weather sensors on NWLON stations $1.0 Klamath River Recovery $3.0IOOS-Ocean sensors on NWS buoys $1.4 Limited Access Privilege Programs (LAPPs) $6.0
Vessel Time and Equipment for Ocean Science Observers and Training $3.0O&M for Newer NOAA Fisheries Research Vessels
$4.6 Survey and Monitoring Projects $1.7
OKEANOS EXPLORER O&M $1.0 Aquaculture $3.0Additional support for vessel crews $1.7 Marine Mammals and Sound $1.8Vessel Equipment and Technology Refresh $1.0Autonomous Underwater Vehicles for Hydrographic Surveying
$0.7 NOAA Total $123
Mapping the Extended Continental Shelf $8.0Saltonstall-Kennedy Competitive Fisheries Research Grants (mandatory funds)
$3.5Support Implementation of Ocean Research Priorities Plan (ORPP)
$20
Right Whales Research $2.0 Transfer to National Science Foundation $17.0Ocean Health Initiative $1.0 Transfer to Department of Interior (USGS) $3.0International Polar Year—Marine survey in the Antarctic
$0.6
Total $143
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