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Overview of e-Infrastructure in context of EU-US cooperation

Overview of e-Infrastructure in context of EU-US cooperation. Symposium on transatlantic EU-U.S. cooperation on Large Scale Research Infrastructures Rome, 01 October 2010. Kostas Glinos European Commission - DG INFSO Head of Unit, Géant and e-Infrastructures.

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Overview of e-Infrastructure in context of EU-US cooperation

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  1. Overview of e-Infrastructure in context of EU-US cooperation Symposium on transatlantic EU-U.S. cooperation on Large Scale Research InfrastructuresRome, 01 October 2010 Kostas Glinos European Commission - DG INFSO Head of Unit, Géant and e-Infrastructures

  2. Where e-Infrastructures stand today

  3. Main user communities supported

  4. Funding per type of e-infrastructure(2003 – 2010)

  5. Euratom Cooperation JRC 4062 M€ 32413 M€ 1751 M€ Capacities 4097 M€ People 4750 M€ Ideas 7510 M€ Research Infrastructures 42% - 1715 M€ Dev. of policies INCO Science in Society Regions of Knowledge SMEs Research Potential Budget Overview (FP7 - 2007-13) e-Infrastructures (ICT for Science) 572 M€

  6. Some recent developments on computing, data

  7. >350 sites • >200 000 CPUs, 100 PByte of storage • ~150 000 jobs successfully completed per day • 200 Virtual Organisations • >10.000 registered users Launching of the EGI Astrophysics and astroparticle physics Biomedical and bioinformatics Computational chemistry Computational sciences High Energy Physics Disaster recovery Digital Libraries Earth sciences Infrastructure Geophysics Finance Fusion ••• 7

  8. vision 2030 high-level experts group on Scientific Data “Our vision is a scientific e-infrastructure that supports seamless access, use, re-use, and trust of data. In a sense, the physical and technical infrastructure becomes invisible and the data themselves become the infrastructure – a valuable asset, on which science, technology, the economy and society can advance.” high-level experts group on Scientific Data

  9. Data as Infrastructure Vision 2030 of the High-Level Group on Scientific Data

  10. Source: High-level Group on Scientific Data Aggregated Data Sets(Temporary or Permanent) Other Data Climatology Biology Scientific Data(Discipline Specific) Astronomy Chemistry Workflows History Aggregation Path Demography Researcher 2 Researcher 1 Scientific World • API • Data Discovery & Navigation • Workflows Generation Community Support Services Data Services • Computing Infrastructure • Persistent Storage Capacity • Integrity • Authentication & Security Non Scientific World

  11. Future perspectives fore-Infrastructures • e-Infrastructures in transition • Towards infrastructure-as-a-service • From connectivity and grids to an integrated offer involving networks, data, all computing and software • Progressive and disparate involvement of users • Governance and financial models in evolution • What role for innovation? • More emphasis on Scientific Data Infrastructures • International dimension continues to be important • Enabling open Science, research and innovation

  12. e-Infrastructures enable open Science • Collaborate globally • Share tools, resources • Open processes, organisations • Leverage (in and out) • Spin off innovation All depends on the interaction between the infrastructure and its users!

  13. International cooperation (EU-US)

  14. Cyber/e-Infrastructures: achievements, good practices Transatlantic WS on research networks (Vilnius, June 2010) EGEE-III – OSG (24/7 grid-service) GEANT – NASA, Abilene, ESnet (40Gbit/s) DEISA2 – TeraGrid (global file system) Pooling of resources NSF-EC for connection to Pakistan

  15. US participants in e-Infrastructure projects Total EU funding to US-organisations: € 82,000

  16. In conformity with principles of cooperation (S&T Agreement) Funded initiatives must include minimum number of legal entities from EU & Associated States (funding-instrument specific) US organisations established in EU or Associated states can receive financial contributions Financial support to US-based organisations possible in case that at least one of following conditions is satisfied: Provision is made to that effect in specific programmes or relevant work-programmes Contribution essential for carrying out the action Such funding is provided for in a bilateral scientific and technological agreement or any other agreement between the European Community and the US Rules for participation for US-organisations

  17. Jointly proposed topics for discussion today • Common policies/agreements on open access to scientific data • Common approaches to Authentication and Authorization • Cloud and Grid coordination, development & interoperability efforts • Joint distributed computing support for LHC, LIGO, including extending/expanding OSG • Coordinated call for Innovations in International Distributed computing for science and engineering • Coordinated call on software sustainability efforts • Support to exchanges of personnel between e-Infrastructure operators and joint dissemination projects (e.g. on RI initiatives across the Atlantic)

  18. New opportunities: e-Infrastructure Call-9 for Proposals

  19. €27M biology space climatology astronomy geosciences physics fusion environment spectroscopy medical ICT … eScience Environment User Communities Data layer Network layer Call-9 (closing 23 Nov 2010, €95m ) Further info: www.cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/e-infrastructure/ €4M NCPs Support actions €43M PRACE €20M Simulation software & services layer Computing layer: Distributed Computing & PRACE €1M

  20. Cyber/e-Infrastructures underpinning a creativity machine… “We humans have built a creativity machine. It’s the sum of three things: a few hundred million of computers, a communication system connecting those computers, and some millions of human beings using those computers and communications.” Vernor Vinge (Nature, Vol 440, March 2006)

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