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ISO TC211, ECVs and SCC 40

ISO TC211, ECVs and SCC 40. Dr. Siri Jodha S. Khalsa (sirijodha.khalsa@ieee.org). June 13, 2008. Overview. ISO TC211 The 19100 series of standards Efforts to create standards for representation of “Essential Climate Variables” The UNFCCC’s request to ISO to create a Joint Steering Group

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ISO TC211, ECVs and SCC 40

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  1. ISO TC211, ECVs and SCC 40 Dr. Siri Jodha S. Khalsa (sirijodha.khalsa@ieee.org) June 13, 2008

  2. Overview ISO TC211 The 19100 series of standards Efforts to create standards for representation of “Essential Climate Variables” The UNFCCC’s request to ISO to create a Joint Steering Group Involving TC207 and TC211 IEEE-SA SCC 40 (Earth Observations) Created to support GEOSS

  3. The goal of ISO/TC 211... ... is to develop a family of international standards that will • support the understanding and usage of geographic information • increase the availability, access, integration, and sharing of geographic information, enabling the interoperability of geospatially enabled computer systems • contribute to unification of efforts to address global ecological and humanitarian problems • ease the establishment of geospatial infrastructures on local, regional and global levels • contribute to sustainable development

  4. WG 9 Hiroshi ImaiJapan WG 10 Sang-Ki Hong Korea ISO/TC 211 organization Chairman Olaf ØstensenSecretaryBjørnhild SæterøyNorway AG Strategy TMG AG Outreach HMMG TF 211/204 AGS-PT JAG WG 7Antony CooperSouth Africa WG 6 Douglas O’BrienCanada WG 4Morten BorrebækNorway Geospatial services Information management Ubiquitous public access Imagery Informationcommunities

  5. Member listParticipating members (P-members), 31 countries Russian Federation Saudi Arabia Republic of Serbia South Africa Spain Sweden Switzerland Thailand United Kingdom United States of America Australia Austria Belgium Canada China Czech Rep. Denmark Ecuador Finland Germany Hungary Italy Japan Republic of Korea Malaysia Morocco Netherlands New Zealand Norway Peru Portugal

  6. Member listObserving members 30 (25 O-members, 4 corresponding members) Argentina Bahrain (corr.) Brunei Darussalam (corr.) Colombia Croatia Cuba Estonia (corr.) France Greece Hong Kong (corr.) Iceland India Indonesia Isl. Rep. of Iran Ireland Jamaica Kenya Mauritius Oman (corr.) Pakistan Philippines Poland Romania Slovakia Slovenia Tanzania Turkey Ukraine Uruguay Zimbabwe

  7. External liaisons, 1 of 2 • CEOS, Committee on Earth Observation Satellites • DGIWG, Digital Geographic Information Working Group • EPSG, European Petroleum Survey Group • ESA, European Space Agency • JRC, European Commission Joint Research Centre • EuroSDR, European Spatial Data Research • FAO/UN, Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations • FIG, International Federation of Surveyors • GSDI, Global Spatial Data Infrastructure • IAG, International Association of Geodesy • ICA, International Cartographic Association • ICAO, International Civil Aviation Organization • IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Society • IHB, International Hydrographic Bureau • ISCGM, International Steering Committee for Global Mapping • ISPRS, International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing • JRC, Joint Research Centre, European Commission • OGC, Open Geospatial Consortium, Incorporated

  8. External liaisons, 2 of 2 • PCGIAP, The Permanent Committee on GIS Infrastructure for Asia and the Pacific • PC IDEA, Permanent Committee on Spatial Data Infrastructure for the Americas • SCAR, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research • UN Economic Commission for Europe, Statistical Division • UNGEGN, United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names • UNGIWG, United Nations Geographic Information Working Group • WMO, World Meteorological Organization • CEN/TC 287, Geographic information • CEN/ISSS Workshop on Metadata for Multimedia Information - Dublin Core • CEN/TC 278, Road Transport and Traffic Telematics

  9. Internal liaisons • ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 24 Computer graphics, image processing and environmental data representation • ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 31 Automatic identification and data capture techniques • ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 32 Data Management and Interchange • ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 36 Information technology for learning, education and training • ISO/TC 20 /SC 13 Space data and information transfer systems • ISO/TC 46/WG 2 Coding of country names and related entities • ISO/TC 59/SC 13 Organization of information about construction works • ISO/TC 69 Applications of statistical methods • ISO/TC 154 Processes, data elements and documents in commerce, industry and administration • ISO/TC 184/SC 4 Industrial data and global manufacturing languages • ISO/TC 204 Transport Information and Control Systems • ISO/TC 207 Environmental management • ISO/TC 241 Project Committee: Road Traffic Safety Management System

  10. Integrating GI and IT

  11. ISO TC211 • 19100 series • A structured set of standards for information concerning objects or phenomena with locations relative to the Earth • Specifies methods, tools and services for management of geographic information • Including the definition, acquisition, analysis, access, presentation and transfer of such data • Over 50 projects; 40 have been finalized as ISO standards or technical specifications • Adaptable through use of profiles

  12. Highlights of 191XX Standards • Architectural Reference Model (ISO 19101) • Describes computational services to manipulate geographic information in a distributed processing environment • Presents Enterprise, Informational, Computation, Engineering Viewpoints • General feature model (ISO 19109) • Meta-model for developing conceptual models • Types, attributes, associations and operations for “features” (abstractions of real world phenomena), defined in feature catalogs (19110) • Also covers application schema

  13. More 191XX Standards • Metadata (ISO 19115) • Widely adopted in earth observation community • Encoding (ISO 19139) • XML schemas for describing, validating and exchanging metadata • 19128 (WMS), 19136 (GML), 19142 (WFS) inherited from OGC • Others • 19117 – portrayal, 19118 – encoding, 19119 - services • Also, standards for DRM, registry management, and quality measures

  14. IPCC, UNEP, UNFCCC, GTOS and ECVs • The UNEP (United Nations Environment Program) and the WMO (World Meteorological Organization) created the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) • To assesses the scientific, technical and socio-economic information necessary to understand the risk of human-induced climate change • GCOS (Global Climate Observing System) was created to ensure that observations and information necessary for addressing climate change are available. • Includes GOOS, GTOS, GAW, GCW

  15. Essential Climate Variables • GCOS has identified 47 Essential Climate Variables (ECVs) • Determined to be technically and economically feasible for systematic observation • Need to be accurately measured and systematically monitored • Of the 13 Terrestrial ECVs, most are globally distributed and can be represented as coverages • The ECVs encompass many domains and measurement protocols

  16. UNFCC’s Request to GTOS • In 2006 the UNFCCC (United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change) the SBSTA (Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice) called on GTOS to: • “assess the status of the development of standards for each of the essential climate variables in the terrestrial domain” • The UNFAO is working with TC211 to develop standards for the representation one of the terrestrial ECVs – Land Cover • GEO Task CL-06-03: Develop intergovernmental mechanisms for coordinating terrestrial observations needed for climate studies and forecasting.

  17. 19144 – Classification Systems • Part 1: Classification system structure • Based on discrete coverages and classification rules maintained in registry • At DIS stage • Part 2: Land Cover Classification System • FAO/UNEP Land Cover Classification System • Conceptual Basis for land cover description and Registration of Classifiers • Did not pass vote to advance to DIS, being revised

  18. LCCS • Provides a scale independent method of classifying land cover • Uses a set of diagnostic criteria to successively refine land cover features • Approach is generic and supports all types of land cover and accommodates all existing classification systems • Goal is to create an absolute level of standardization between different land cover classification systems

  19. ISO Joint Steering Group • ISO will establish Joint Steering Group for ECVs to support the UNFCCC’s mandate • The JSG will determine which ISO committee or liaison organization will create each required standard • Expected to happen at TMB September 2008 • It is possible that the JSG will ask bodies like the IEEE for technical advice • Leary of undue influence from industry

  20. The Standards Coordinating Committee for Earth Observations (SCC 40) • Created to oversee the development of standards essential to the functioning of GEOSS (Global Earth Observations System of Systems ) • Includes standards related to sensor systems, communications, data processing, data archiving, data searching and access, data portrayal and decision support systems • Type 2 - can sponsor a standards development effort involving multiple IEEE technical societies • Approved by the Standards Board 3/2006

  21. SCC 40 • The ICEO has taken a leadership role in facilitating standards and interoperability for GEOSS • Current SCC40 membership is 8 volunteers working on GEOSS-related standards projects • IEEE members are also working to support • The ICEO Standards Working Group • The GEO Standards and Interoperability Forum • The GEOSS Standards Registry • The GEO Interoperability Process Pilot Projects

  22. Useful Links • GEO Standards Registry (hosted by IEEE-SA) • http://seabass.ieee.org/groups/geoss/ • SCC 40 Homepage • http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/earthobservationsSCC/ • ICEO Homepage • http://www.ieee-earth.org/ • TC211 Homepage • http://www.isotc211.org/ • GTOS Homepage (Terrestrial ECVs) • http://www.fao.org/gtos/

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