1 / 36

International SOLAS: Network Progress and Data Management SCOR Summit Meeting London December 2006

International SOLAS: Network Progress and Data Management SCOR Summit Meeting London December 2006. Science Structure National Developments Network Activities Major SOLAS Endeavors Data and Project Management . Science. The Domain of SOLAS Research. SOLAS has 3 Foci:

taryn
Télécharger la présentation

International SOLAS: Network Progress and Data Management SCOR Summit Meeting London December 2006

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. International SOLAS: Network Progress and Data Management SCOR Summit Meeting London December 2006

  2. Science Structure National Developments Network Activities Major SOLAS Endeavors Data and Project Management

  3. Science

  4. The Domain of SOLAS Research

  5. SOLAS has 3 Foci: Focus 1: Biogeochemical Interactions and Feedbacks Between Ocean and Atmosphere Chairs: Bill Miller(USA) & Mitsuo Uematsu (Japan) Focus 2: Exchange Processes at the Air-Sea Interface and the Role of Transport and Transformation in the Atmospheric and Oceanic Boundary Layers Chair: Wade McGillis (USA) Focus 3: Air-Sea Flux of CO2 and Other Long-Lived Radiatively-Active Gases Chairs: Truls Johannessen (Norway) & Arne Koertzinger (Germany) Activity is joint w/ IMBER and has 3 sub-groups: WG1-Surface Ocean Systems WG2-Interior Ocean WG3-Sensitivity: (future oceans)

  6. Joint Implementation Plan complete (see web sites) • To be printed early 2007 • Meet in Paris in April; IOCCP Surface pCO2 and Ocean Vulnerability Workshop

  7. Structure

  8. The IGBP Network AIMES

  9. SPARC 1992 GEWEX 1988  SOLAS 2001 -> CliC 2000 CLIVAR 1995  WGNE WGCM WGSF WCRP Observation Assmilation Panel WCRP Modelling Panel Coordinated Observation and Prediction of the Earth System

  10. SOLAS Networks in 23 Nations Substantial Programs: Canada Germany Japan UK USA Sponsors:

  11. SOLAS is developing an African Network Cape Verde Egypt Ghana Kenya Morocco Nigeria South Africa Zimbabwe Future plans include an African-SOLAS Workshop

  12. National Developments

  13. Major NEW SOLAS Funded Program in Germany Coordinator: Douglas Wallace, IFM-GEOMAR Submitted: Jan 2006 Proposed start: Jan 2007 Requested: EU 6.5 m over 3 years (12 Institutions, 43 Investigators, 23 sub-projects)

  14. SOLAS-Japan “Linkages in Biogeochemical Cycles Between the Surface Ocean and Lower Atmosphere” July 2006 award; $9.2 million; 5 Year duration • Source the supply of land-based substances controlling primary production in the Pacific • Determine how the marine ecological system will response to changing atmospheric composition • Determine how the production and emission of biogenic gases affect atmospheric composition • Evaluate the contribution of marine biogenic gases to global warming • Provide basic knowledge of the issues of global warming to policy makers

  15. OUTLINE of Implementation Projects for each Focus 1:1 Global Ocean Trace Gas Surveys 1:2 The North-Atlantic African Dust-Aerosol Experiment (NAFDAE) 1:3 Ocean-Atmosphere Ice-Snowpack (OASIS) 1:4 Climate Modeling in SOLAS (CLIMAS) 2:1 World Ocean Gas Exchange Process Studies 2:2 Surface Spray in situ and modelling studies 2:3 HiT-US 2:4 Cape Verde Air-Sea Interaction Time Series Station 3:1 Air-Water Carbon and Methane Fluxes in Coastal Oceans 3:2 Southern Ocean Carbon Dioxide Studies 3:3 Global Surface Carbon Concentration Surveys 3:4 Perturbation Experiments 4:1 Autonomous and Langrangian platforms (ALPS) for SOLAS 4:2 Satellites and Model Assimilations 4:3 Summer School 4:4 Data Management US-SOLAS Science Plan

  16. Network Activities

  17. SOLAS/INI Review of Anthropogenic Nitrogen Impacts on the Open Ocean Joint SOLAS/International Nitrogen Initiative (INI) Review of Anthropogenic Nitrogen Impacts on the Open Ocean University of East Anglia on 17-20 November2006. The products will be 2-3 papers for submission to journals such as Deep-Sea Research or Global Biogeochemical Cycles, and a review paper submitted to Science or Nature. SOLAS, NOAA, INI and SCOR sponsored

  18. With support from SOLAS International Project Office and BELSPO DMS model inter-comparison workshop Brussels, 4-8 December 2006 Conduct a systematic comparison of DMS ecosystem models against common data sets to spur improvements and indicate needed observations to better constrain DMS dynamics. • Origin: Discussion forum at SOLAS Open Science meeting, Halifax Oct 2004 Ad-hoc committee: C. Lancelot, M. Levasseur and A. Vezina Y. Le Clainche drafted as scientific coordinator, V. Schoemann as local organizer

  19. With support from IOCCP, SOLAS, IMBER and GCP Ocean Surface pCO2 and Vulnerabilities Workshop Paris, 11-14 April 2007 • Review current knowledge and enhance international cooperation to resolve the magnitude, variability and processes governing ocean sources and sinks of carbon: from observations, process-based models and atmospheric and oceanic inversions • Vulnerabilities in the Ocean Carbon-Climate System • Ocean Carbon Sources and Sinks • Estimation of Air-Sea CO2 Fluxes Planning Committe: Bronte Tilbrook, Nicolas Metzl, Corrine LeQuere, Roger Dargaville, Dorothee Bakker, Kitack Lee, Scott Doney, Sylvie Roy, Dick Feely, Jeff Hare

  20. SOLAS links closely with other projects in attendance: GEOTRACES IMBER CLIVAR GEOHAB SCAR Various SCOR WG’s

  21. Major SOLAS Activities

  22. SOLAS Summer School 2007 • 22nd October- 3rd November • Scientific committee: Phil Boyd NZ Minhan Dai China Mitsuo Uematsu Japan Maurice Levasseur Canada Véronique Garçon France Corinne Le Quéré UK Peter Liss UK Uli Platt Germany Natalie Mahowald US Eric Saltzman US Institut Scientifique de Cargèse, Corsica, France

  23. Register Early until Dec 31 • Bring students / post-docs

  24. Data and Project Management

  25. Major developments for coordinating SOLAS data and activities European Cooperation in the Field of Scientific and Technical Research (COST Action 735) • Supports the creation of air-sea flux data products for three research areas (parallel to SOLAS Foci) • Network of researchers / Workshops / Coordinating Meetings • € 50k - 70k per year for 5 years (begins October 2006) 1. Consolidate current knowledge of air-sea interactions. 2. Identify gaps and stimulate new research. 3. Provide a framework into which new data and process-understanding can be assimilated. 4. Develop tools for production of global air-sea fluxes of climate-relevant compounds.

  26. Major developments for coordinating SOLAS data and activities UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) UK SOLAS Knowledge Transfer (KT) • Data Integrator position filled in November 2006 (Tom Bell) • Coordinates with BODC, Met Office Hadley Centre, and CASIX • Parallels and works closely with COST Action 735 • Compile air-sea flux datasets into a common framework. • Intercalibrate and compare data sets and methods, assessing errors. • Compare data products with research users’ model outputs. • Facilitate inclusion of chemical and biological knowledge of air-sea gas fluxes into coupled models. • Assess the role of the oceans in regulating air quality and the atmosphere’s oxidation capacity. • Synthesise knowledge of likely changes in air-sea exchange under various global change scenarios.

  27. Tracking SOLAS Projects and Products IMP2 Template Endorsement

  28. Tracking SOLAS Projects and Products Acknowledgement Inventory

  29. SOLAS Data Management TeamDoug Wallace (Outgoing Chair); Juan Brown (Incoming Chair)Rik Wanninkhof, Claire Reeves, Alex Kosyr, Tom Bell, Phil Williamson, Jeff Hare, Gwen Moncoiffe, Lu Wang • Evaluate and document data products and data handling requirements • Develop practical policy for the documentation of models and model products • Recommend a common data reporting and sharing policy suitable for adoption by projects seeking International SOLAS endorsement • Ensure that procedures are established to allow quantification of data uncertainties and quality (metadata requirements) • Make recommendations concerning data centres that are particularly suitable for SOLAS needs • Work with national SOLAS PIs, data centres, the SOLAS IPO and national funding agencies to coordinate an international network of data managers that are hands-on with SOLAS data.

  30. SOLAS Data Management Principles: 1. Use existing knowledge and infrastructure. Use internationally agreed standards and protocols.. Work with other projects towards establishing an integrated data management system and policy. Plan ahead for rapid data assembly. Data managers will support data gatherers. Data should be made available rapidly. Data users will consult and collaborate with data providers. 7.Data will be reported with metadata and quality flags. Model documentation, model output and models will be made available to the community. 9.Participation in SOLAS research requires submission of data to a SOLAS- approved database or centre.

  31. The Data Management Team •Document likely data products and requirements •Establish data reporting policy (time limits, incentives and enforcements, access rights, meta-data requirements, etc). • Implement a practical policy for documentation of models and model-derived products. •Design a data reporting and retrieval structure that is efficient and compatible with the observational issues. •Negotiate with nations & funding agencies to organize, fund and implement the data management structure. •Develop a data management manual (guides to reporting, quality assessment, data and model access procedures).

  32. Class 1: Geographically/temporally resolved data. • Hydrographic data collection from ships, time-series and • autonomous platforms. • •Remote sensing data from a wide range of sensors • and satellites. • •Time-series of meteorological and atmospheric • chemistry data. • •Data collected from aircraft and balloons. • •Data collected from volunteer observing ships. • •Data products from operational ocean and • atmosphere models.

  33. Class 2: Data from Experiments and Mechanistic Studies. • Mesocosm and mesoscale patch experiments. • Studies of gas exchange. Class 3: Models, Model Documentation and Model Output.

More Related