integrated ocean observing system (ioos) update dave zilkoski noaa ioos project manager national...
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Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) Update
Dave ZilkoskiNOAA IOOS Project Manager
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) October 17, 2006
3
Ocean Action Plan Governance Structure
Committee on Ocean Policy
Chair: CEQ
Interagency Committee on Ocean Science and Resource Management Integration (ICOSRMI)
Co-Chairs: CEQ, OSTP
Subcommittee on Integrated Management of Ocean Resources
(SIMOR)Co-Chairs: CEQ, DOC/NOAA, EPA, DOI
Joint Subcommittee on Science and Technology (JSOST)
Co-Chairs: NSF, OSTP, DOC/NOAA
Ocean Observations
(IWGOO)Chair: DOC/NOAA
Ocean Infrastructure
Chair: Navy
Ocean EducationChair: NSF
Ocean Partnerships
Chair: Navy
Ocean and Coastal Mapping
Chair: USGS
Harmful Algal Blooms, Hypoxia
and Human Health
Chair: DOC/NOAA
Ocean.US
Inte
rag
ency
Par
tici
pat
ion
JSO
ST
Wo
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g G
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ps
4
NOAA IOOS Oversight Structure
5
The Big Picture
IOOS =U.S. Contribution to GOOS A federally-led and managed
partnership Web-based Fully interoperable A data and info delivery tool Integrates physical, biological,
chemical, geological observations Scaleable to regional needs Addresses a wide range of
applications Enables improved decision making
through national and regional models
Ocean and coastal data - where and when users need it
6
IOOS Components
3 Interdependent Subsystems:• Observing (Global and Coastal components)• Data Management & Communication (DMAC)• Modeling and Analysis
Global Ocean Component
Resolution
Lower
Higher
PARTNERSPARTNERS
Federal Agencies
Regional Associations
State Agencies
World Meteorological Organization
Intergovernmental Oceanographic
Commission
PARTNERSPARTNERS
Federal Agencies
Regional Associations
State Agencies
World Meteorological Organization
Intergovernmental Oceanographic
CommissionCoastal Ocean
Component
Modeling &Analysis
DMAC
Regional Observing Systems(11 Regional Associations)
7
Commerce & Transportation
Hydrographic Surveys (includes bathymetry)
National Current Observations
National Water Level Observation Network (NWLON)
Physical Oceanographic Real Time System (PORTS®)
Shoreline Surveys
Climate IOOS Arctic Observing System IOOS Argo Profiling Floats* IOOS Drifting Buoys IOOS Ocean Carbon Networks* IOOS Ocean Reference Station* IOOS Ships of Opportunity IOOS Tide Gauge Stations IOOS Tropical Moored Buoys
Ecosystems Coastal Change Analysis Program (C-CAP)* Coral Reef Ecosystem Integrated Observing
System (CREIOS) Commercial Fisheries-Dependent Data Economic/ Sociocultural Observing System* Ecosystem Surveys Fish Surveys National Observer Program Protected Resource Surveys Habitat Assessment Recreational Fisheries-Dependent Data System-Wide Monitoring Program (SwiM) for
Marine Sanctuaries* System-Wide Monitoring Program (SWMP) for
National Estuarine Research Reserves Passive Acoustics Observing System* National Status and Trends Program*
Weather & Water Coastal Marine Automated Network (C-MAN) DART Voluntary Observing Ships Weather Buoys
CoastalTotal Systems: 23
Mission Support NOAA Ships NOAA Aircraft* NOAA Satellites
GlobalTotal Systems: 8
* - NOAA is working to update Interagency IOOS documentation
NOAA’s IOOS Observing Systems
8
IOOS Global Component
Designed to meet climate requirements but also supports:
Weather prediction Global and coastal ocean prediction Marine hazards warning Transportation Marine environment and ecosystem
monitoring Naval applications Homeland security
Objectives are well defined with GPRA performance measures.
Well coordinated nationally and internationally – the ocean baseline of GEOSS.
System 55% complete IOOS Tide gauge stations IOOS Drifting Buoys IOOS Tropical Moored Buoys IOOS Argo Profiling Floats IOOS Ships of Opportunity IOOS Ocean Reference
Stations IOOS Ocean Carbon Networks
IOOS Arctic Observing System Dedicated Ship Support Data & Assimilation
Subsystems Management and Product
Delivery Satellites (managed outside of
IOOS)
9
IOOS Global ComponentsMulti-Year Program Plan
FY’04 ‘06‘05 ‘07 ‘08 ‘09 ‘10
Tide Gauges170 Real-time StationsInitial GCOS Subset
Surface Drifting Buoys
Tropical Moored Buoys
Ships of Opportunity
Argo Floats
Reference Stations
Arctic System
Ocean Carbon Network
Dedicated Ship Time
51 Hi-res and frequentlyrepeated lines occupied
3000 floats
119 moorings
1250 buoys
882Days at sea (NOAA contribution)
37 Repeat Sections Committed,1 inventory/10 years
89 observatories, flux, and ocean transport stations
54 Ice buoys, drifting andMoored stations
1250
84
39
2300
42
15
493
101
458
975
79
27
1500
41
9
458
91
1250
97
42
3000
44
24
20
659
125
1250
119
51
3000
60
31
155
1250
115
47
3000
54
52
28
882
145
1250
104
45
3000
49
41
23
831
135
1250
87
40
3000
43
24
17
644
113
13 24 24
1250
119
51
3000
89
37
170
1250
119
51
3000
78
54
34
882
160
54
882
‘11 ‘12
100% complete
10
IOOS Coastal Component
Designed to meet IOOS societal goals and all 5 NOAA Mission Goals
Also supports other agency and partner efforts to manage our Nation’s oceans, coasts, and Great Lakes
Coordinated nationally and regionally focusing on partnerships.
Better defining objectives and working on developing strong GPRA measures.
NOAA capacities: 24 programs contribute,
8-9 major contributors Project Office in NOS
AA’s office coordinates NOAA-wide activities
NOAA contributes 55 -65% of the present national effort.
11
384
200
2084
FY‘04 ‘05 ‘06 ‘07 ‘09‘08 ‘10 ‘11 ‘12Coastal and
Hurricane Buoys # moorings
NWLON Stations
PORTS®
Dedicated Ship Time
Coastal Currents (NCOP)
Days at sea (USCG + NOAA)
# short-term ADCP
# water level stations
# seaports with access to PORTS®
Coastal Stations # stations
IOOS Coastal ComponentsMulti-Year Program Plan
DART # tsunami stations
Hydrography sq. nautical miles
Shoreline % mapped in priority ports and rest of US
Voluntary Obs. Ships Automated weather obs
Surface Currents Mapping (HF Radar)
# coastal (HF) radars
220
130
830
122
200
888673
200
88
260
137
130
1162
190
300
130
1470
262
280
150
130
1328
224
240
117
130
996
156
5754 54 63 696660
227 577296 581
42 77 97
39 39 39393910
3834
43 70 70
38
650025003079 300010000 10000100008000
32 35 35353331.931.7 22
45 170140
6 24 39
2070
24
36 1208460120
54 54
175
187
20
100% complete
FY17
81FY1
6
FY13
FY17
0 0 0 0 9510
0 0 0
12
IOOS Coastal ComponentMulti-Year Program Plan
?
230
230
14
100
75
TBD
84
FY‘04 ‘06‘05 ‘07 ‘08 ‘09 ‘10 ‘11 ‘12
20
2
64
128110
26
158
5
74
127
55
100
85
191
47
196
75
82
177
39
177
45
79
162
7
139
25
69
131Fish SurveysAdequate fish stock assessments
Economic/ Sociocultural Observations
Commercial and Recreational Fisheries-Dependent Data
Coral Ecosystem Integrated Observations
Coastal Change Analysis Program
System-Wide Monitoring (SWiM) for Marine Sanctuaries
% jurisdictions monitoring biological habitats, living marine resources, & water quality*
% regions w/ adequate long-term H20 quality monitoring
FMP economic benefits and community profiles
# fish stocks with sufficient fishery monitoring
6361 6216416315459
Protected Resources SurveysAdequate protected species assessments
137
55 5 3025205Ecosystem Surveys Ecosystem assessments
3 7641National Status and TrendsCumulative coastal assessments
National Observer ProgramFisheries with adequate observer coverage26 26 5351512626
26
System-Wide Monitoring Prog. (SWMP) for Estuarine Research
Reserves
65
100
205
85
213
165
40
8
54
73
100
219
85
230
10
166
40
9
56
# reserves w/ H20 quality and biological monitoring capabilities
# sanctuaries w/ adequate long-term H20 quality monitoring
0 0
2
147
5 5
10 35
100% complete
?
FY18
FY49
FY13
FY15
26 27 27 56 56 58 58 60
2 2 6 9 10
60
147
* This measure does not represent the whole Program
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IOOS: Where are we today
On target to meet objectivesModerate effort and focus required to meet objectivesSubstantial effort and focus required to meet objectives
Manage and build to requirements
Develop new products to meet user requirements
Sustain IOOS-based research and development
Focus modeling component (OSSE/ data assimilation)
Expand and Enhance IOOS Products & Services
Implement DMAC standards and practices
Build and sustain observing systems
Sustain and Improve Technical Infrastructure
Coordinate with external IOOS
Establish centralized IOOS management
Management Processes
Integrate existing observations
14
NOAA FY05-06 Accomplishments
Observations• Converted NOAA Weather Buoys to multi-purpose platforms
• Leveraged existing platforms to fill observation gaps by adding 234 oceanographic sensors on 130 platforms by January 2007
• NERRS System Wide Monitoring Program Enhancements – Data Telemetry added for 27 weather stations and 35 water quality stations
Data Management & Communications• Completed IOOS conceptual designs• Established interagency DMAC standards approval process - first set of
standards have been submitted for approval• Established Data Assembly Center at NDBC which provides 38% more data
on the NWS Telecommunications Gateway (NWSTG) for ingestion in NOAA models and forecasts
Coastal Ocean Observing Technology Systems (COTS)• Regional platforms are augmenting NOAA observations • 5.025 million observations/year• 25% from NOAA assets; 30% from other federal assets; and 45% from COTS
recipients
15
NOAA FY05-06 Accomplishments
Modeling and Analysis
• Demonstrated community modeling approach - Created standardized inputs and outputs for next generation storm surge model
Project Management
• Sustained Ocean.US interagency planning office
• Established interagency priorities Regional Association Development
• RAs developed needs assessments and business plans
• Regional governance structures established Research and Development
• Applied research for a national High Frequency Radar Network
• Sensor development of ecosystem observation technologies Education and Outreach
• Developing NOAA Ocean Data Education (NODE) portal for data integration, visualization and interpretation for non-scientists
16
Architecture
TargetArchitecturePrinciples:• Utility
• Interoperability
• Flexibility
• Sustainability
• Affordability
PartnershipsNational International
IOOS
17
Build IOOS community standards and protocols
Establish formal interagency program structure
Continue technology development
Build partnerships
Move forward on Conceptual Designs
Comment on the Ocean Research Priorities Plan
•Public comment period open until October 20
•http://ocean.ceq.gov/about/sup_jsost_public_comment.html
Next Steps…
Thank You