160 likes | 300 Views
GROUP ON EARTH OBSERVATIONS GEO 5 June 2008 Tashkent, Uzbekistan Ms. Marta ANGOLOTI mangoloti@inm.es Co-chair of the Capacity Building Committee SPAIN. GEO, the Group on Earth Observations
E N D
GROUP ON EARTH OBSERVATIONS GEO5 June 2008 Tashkent, UzbekistanMs. Marta ANGOLOTI mangoloti@inm.esCo-chair of the Capacity Building CommitteeSPAIN
GEO, the Group on Earth Observations An Intergovernmental Organization with 73 Member Countries, the European Commission and 52 Participating Organizations U.S. Department of State, Washington DC July 31, 2003
The Earth is a complex system of systems Surface, atmosphere, sub-surface and their interaction
Any Single Problem Requires Many Data Sets • A Single Data Set Will Serve Many Communities • A great number of Observing Systems of different nature and with different purposes There is a Need to coordinate observations and to Share all Earth Observation Data in Standard Interoperable Formats.
GEOSS: A Global, Coordinated, Comprehensive and Sustained System of Observing Systems GEOSS will be built from the expansion and interlinking of existing observation and information systems and the investments of Members and Participating Organizations in new systems
GEOSS addresses Nine Societal Benefit Areas 1. Reduction and Prevention of Disasters 2. Human Health and Epidemiology 3. Energy Management 4. Climate Variability & Change 5. Water Management 6. Weather Forecasting 7. Ecosystems 8. Agriculture 9. Biodiversity
GEO Data Sharing Principles • Data and Products at Minimum Time delay and Minimum Cost • Free of Charge or Cost of Reproduction for Research and Education • Full and Open Exchange of Data…Recognizing Relevant International Instruments and National Policies and Legislation
How GEO works • Coordinating activities of Members and Participating Organisations • Supporting the development of capabilities for Observations, Processing and Information Dissemination • Encouraging cross-cutting approaches The GEO implementation tool is the Workplan
The GEO Workplan To address targets of the Implementation Plan and track relevant progress, the main tool is a Workplan, approved every year by the GEO Plenary. The Plan is structured in tasks encompassing all the SBA’s and the transverse areas leading to the progressive definition and implementation of GEOSS Current Workplan is the 2007-2009, available at GEO website http://www.earthobservations.org/
GEO Governance • 10-Year Plan Endorsed by 2005 Ministerial Summit • Plenary (co-chaired by RSA, EC, USA and PRC) • Executive Committee (12 Members) • Four Standing Committees (*) • Executive Secretariat (Geneva) (*) - Architecture and Data - Capacity Building - Science and Technology - User Interface
Capacity building in GEO Infrastructure CB:HW, SW and other technology required to develop, access and use EO… Individuals (Human) CB:education and training of individuals to be aware of, access, use and develop EO… Institutional CB:building policies, programs & organizational structures in governments and organizations to enhance the understanding of the value of EO… …data and products. I³
An END 2 END Approach to building capacity for Access & Retrieve Integrate & Use Contribute Analyze & Interpret GEO Secretariat
Membership Argentina, Australia, Bangladesh, Brazil (co-chair), Canada, China, Croatia, Egypt, European Commission (co-chair), France, Germany, Greece, India, Iran, Italy, Japan, Korea, Moldova, Morocco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Niger, Portugal, Russia, South Africa (co-chair), Spain (co-chair), Switzerland, Thailand, Uganda, Ukraine, USA, Uzbekistan. AARSE, APN, CEOS, EEA, EIS-Africa, EUMETSAT, EuroGeoSurveys, FDSN, GCOS, IAG, IEEE, IGBP, IOC, ITC, ISCGM, ISPRS, POGO, UNEP, UNESCO (co-chair), UNOOSA, WCRP (START), WMO GEO Secretariat
GEOSS Implementation is a Non-binding, Voluntary Process • Relies on the Goodwill of Members and Participating Organizations • Efficient for Contribution of Components • Not a Funding Mechanism