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CEOS-APAN EM WG interaction. Shin-ichi Sobue NASDA/SPPD. EO Cooperation. Integrated Global Observing Strategy (IGOS) Committee on Earth Observation Satellites (CEOS) CEOS/WTF for GOFC. Integrated Global Observation Strategy. INTEGRATED GLOBAL OBSERVING STRATEGY.
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CEOS-APAN EM WG interaction Shin-ichi Sobue NASDA/SPPD
EO Cooperation • Integrated Global Observing Strategy (IGOS) • Committee on Earth Observation Satellites (CEOS) • CEOS/WTF for GOFC
INTEGRATED GLOBAL OBSERVING STRATEGY • Initiated as a strategy for harmonizing EO missions capabilities and user requirements: • INTEGRATED - as an international effort, both space-based and in-situ measurements • GLOBAL - addresses large-scale environmental changes and global observation • OBSERVING - parameters of scientific and economic/policy importance and large global and regional research programs • STRATEGY - match observing requirements with existing and planned EO capabilities
IGOS Partners UNESCO WCRP IGFA
What will IGOS Achieve? • Long term continuity of spatial observations • Respond to user needs that are beyond the capabilities of existing systems • User-defined observation program • Build upon the strategies of existing international global observation programs
What will IGOS Achieve? • Work towards reducing unnecessary duplication of observations & gaps • Facilitate integration of multiple data sets from different agencies • Be the joint product of different agencies involved • Address the collection of both space-based and in-situ data and their integrated analysis
Concept of an IGOS Redesign systems International and national scientific, social, economic, and political drivers Assess Requirements for observations Evaluate capabilities of observational systems Obtain commitments for change Decide what needs to be changed Change the observational systems Implementation Monitor progress Collect observations and generate products Enhance the product processing chain Assess implementation of systems Use resultant products Deploy improved observational assets and improve use of existing ones Evaluate usefulness of products
Theme Approach • Developed to provide a more coherent focus for the definition and implementation of IGOS. • Current Themes • Ocean • Ocean Color, GODAE, • Water Cycle • CEOP • Atmospheric Chemistry • Integrated Global Carbon Cycle • GOFC • More themes to come • Disaster Management • Coastal Monitoring • etc.
GOFC (Global Observation of Forest Cover) • Objective To improve the quality and availability of satellite observations of forests at regional and global scales To produce useful, timely and validated information products from these data (together with in-situ observations) for a wide variety of users
COMMITTEE ON EARTH OBSERVATION SATELLITES • Created in 1984 • 42 organizations involved • Goals: • To optimize benefits of space-borne Earth observations • To serve as focal point for international coordination of such observations • To exchange policy and technical information to encourage complementarity among space systems
CRI (N.Zealand) CCRS (Canada) GCOS GISTDA(Thai) GOOS GTOS ICSU IGBP IOC IOCCG ISPRS NSC (Norway) OSTC (Belgium) SAC/CSIR (S.A.) UN-ESCAP UN-FAO UN-OOSA UNEP WCRP WMO CEOS Members 20 22 MEMBERS ASSOCIATES ASI (Italy) BNSC (UK) CAST (China) CONAE (Argentina) CSA (Canada) CNES (France) CSIRO (Australia) DLR (Germany) EC (Europe) ESA (Europe) EUMETSAT (Eur.) INPE (Brazil) ISRO (India) KARI(S.Korea) NASA (US) NOAA (US) NRSCC (China) NSAU (Ukraine) STA/NASDA (Japan) Roshydromet (Russia) RSA (Russia) SNSB (Sweden) 13
CEOS STRUCTURE 1984 CHAIR - NOAA 1986 CHAIR - ESA 1988 CHAIR - CSA 1990 CHAIR - INPE 1991 CHAIR - NASA 1992 CHAIR - BNSC 1993 CHAIR - NASDA 1994 CHAIR - DARA 1995 CHAIR - CSA 1996 CHAIR- CSIRO 1997 CHAIR - CNES 1998 CHAIR - ISRO 1999 CHAIR - EUMETSAT 2000 CHAIR - INPE 2001 CHAIR- NASDA 2002 CHAIR - ESA COMMITTEE ON EARTH OBSERVATION SATELLITES STRATEGIC IMPLEMENTATION TEAM SECRETARIAT (ESA,NASA/NOAA, NASDA, CEOS CHAIR) WORKING GROUP ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND SERVICES WORKING GROUP ON CALIBRATION AND VALIDATION CHAIR: CCRS/Canada CHAIR: EC AD-HOC WORKING GROUP ON EO EDUCATION AND TRAINING CHAIR:ISRO DISASTER MANAGEMENT SUPPORT AD HOC WORKING GROUP CHAIR: NOAA
CEOS WGISS CEOS Working Group on Information Systems and Services
WGISS Overview • The Role of Information Systems & Services: An essential element to the success of Earth observation programmes • users need to be able find and access products on a global basis • harmonised systems are essential to allow users to easily and efficiently utilise products globally • coordinated technical development is required if this is to be achieved • WGISS: The Working Group on Information Systems and Services (WGISS) is there to address these issues • facilitates EO data and information management and services for users and data providers on a global, regional and local basis.
Current Foci • User Driven Development: • Following encouragement by CEOS Plenary WGISS has re-oriented itself to work with user organisations in the development of tools, techniques and recommendations • This it has done through the development of the Test Environment • Spatial Information World: • WGISS needs to be a partner in the wider spatial information world, which is rapidly developing information technology. • A specific focus has been WGISS’s relationship with the Open GIS consortium (OGC) where there has been sharing of ideas and joint particpation in meetings • Commercial development: • WGISS has continued to liaise with the EO commercial sector on the development and operation of information systems and services. • Commercial organisations continue to attend WGISS, Sub-Group and associated Workshops • Standards: • WGISS needs to influence the real and de facto standards that are driving the spatial information and commercial developments • Continued links are maintained with key standards organisations (ISO, OGC...)
WGISS Achievements Over the past 6 years WGISS (building on the work of WGD & WGINS) has developed a wide range of tools, techniques, services, & guidelines: • Resource discovery and access • Archive e.g. Purge alert in place; archive interchange format in preparation • Catalogue e.g. Developed CIP; an interoperable catalogue system developed providing access to over 1200 catalogues • Search e.g. One-stop-shop search in place – the IDN provides 10,200 data set descriptions, with 20,000 users / month • Browse e.g. Browse guidelines available • Order e.g. Data ordering now integrated into CIP • Access e.g. Establishment of a virtual CEOS net, with constant network performance monitoring • Resource generation, evaluation and utilisation • Data sets e.g. Global data sets supported • Data formats e.g. Data format guidelines issued • Data rescue e.g. African data sets rescued by USGS at WGISS instigation for developing countries • Outreach • Promotion materiale.g. 2,000 copies of WGISS brochure distibuted 150 attendees at the annual EO/GEO Workshop 40,000 WGISS business cars produced
The WGISS Year • WGISS Meetings • WGISS 12 (joint meeting with the Sub-Groups) hosted by USGS, Sioux Falls, USA (May 2001) • WGISS 13, to be hosted by NASDA in Tokyo, postponed to February 2002 (replaced by a WGISS teleconference) • Sub-Group Meetings • Hosted by Eumetsat, Darmstadt Germany (September 2001) • Associated Workshops • EOGEO, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada (June 2001) (as part of the Digital Earth Conference attended by over 650 persons) • Presentations / Promotion • Internet Workshop (IWS 2001), Tokyo, Japan (February 2001) • UN Geographic Information Working Group, Rome (March 2001) • ASPRS, St. Louis MO, USA (April 2001) • CEOS Disaster Management Support Group (DMSG), Brussels, Belgium (June 2001) • GOFC STB, Frascati Italy (June 2001) • Asia Pacific Network Advanced Network (APAN) Earth Monitoring Working Group, Penang, Malaysia (August 2001) • UN Economic Commission for Africa Committee on Development Information, Addis Ababa (September 2001) • International Federation of Surveyors, Nairobi, Kenya (October 2001) • AfricaGIS Symposium, Nairobi, Kenya (November 2001)
Information Sources • More information on WGISS are available: • WGISS Home Page: http://wgiss.ceos.org • Contact information, documents, etc. • CEOS Home Page: http://www.ceos.org • WGISS Newsletter: http://wgiss.ceos.org • WGISS Brochure: "To provide recommendations and tools related to information systems and services in order to better co-ordinate and enhance global activities in Earth observation.”
Test Environment WGISS has developed a new Test Environment concept which allows WGISS’s products to be tested and used in partnership with user application projects. This was presented to, and approved by Plenary 14 in Rio. • Benefits to Users (e.g. IGOS-P related) • Improved access to data/information through improved systems and services • access to technical expertise • facilitate potential information systems prototypes • Benefits to CEOS • increased and more effective use of space agency data and services • feedback to CEOS to guide future priorities and policy • benchmark relevance of WGISS activities • Benefits to WGISS • Provide a mechanism to work with users on real projects • demonstrate, promote and verify WGISS tools and services within real applications. • provide feedback to guide further developments
WGISS Data & Information Systems, Services & Infrastructure Agglomeration of tools and services held and operated by CEOS organisations A Proposed WGISS Test Environment Version 12/05/2000 WGISS Menu Open reference list of WGISS products & services, updated on the basis of the results of the test facility, linked on-line to the products and services themselves Improved Products & Services Based on the test facility results Products & services Products & services Links to data suppliers Projects To define the data & information systems and services requirements WGISS Test Facility Selected WGISS products and services, made into a coherent, open, modular system by the partners to address each selected project’s needs (can include tools dev’d by the project), dev’d & tested against the project’s requirements Partnership Tools, data Nakodo Impossible requirements Long term operation
What WGISS Can Offer A WTF • Nakodo (marriage arrangement) • Provides a cooperative arrangement between WGISS technical abilities and science project requirements • Coordinate • Technical assistance to relevant ISS problems • Institutional assistance • Facilitate • Technical developments • Input to the formulation of standards • Identify • WGISS tools to address WTF needs • Advise • On the adoption, use or improvement of WGISS tools and services directly related to information systems and services issues • Demonstrate • The use and functionality of WGISS’s portfolio of tools and services • Enable • The development of WGISS tools and services in response to WTF user needs • The transfer of WGISS tools and services to an operational environment
What WGISS Cannot Do To Support A WTF • Cannot build complete information systems • Cannot provide operational data management • Cannot provide support outside the scope of WGISS • Cannot be a service provider • Cannot undertake operational role
The GOFC Test Facility • Status and plans • WGISS and the Global Observation of Forest Cover (GOFC) project have been working together for over 18 months now • The next major milestone will be the demonstration to Plenary 15 • Achievements and participation • WGISS and GOFC have worked together to: • Identify data of interest to GOFC held by CEOS agencies • Identify capabilities needed for improved data access • Implement common interfaces to data of interest, including common protocols and user interfaces • From the CEOS side there has been wide ranging participation, including: • NASA (CEOS lead agency – and many thanks to them for their great effort) • ESA, CCRS, NASDA, USGS, NOAA and the EC (through DG JRC), • From the user side there has also been good participation • SEARRIN, RFD Thailand, AIT Thailand, GISTDA Thailand, Michigan State University USA, University of Maryland USA, MAFF Japan • Demonstration to follow this report • Plenary Issue • Plenary agencies are asked to identify interest in actively participating with staff and resources Interested agencies are asked to contact the WGISS Chair
Components MAFF/NASDA WMS CCRS/CubeWerx Client NASA IDN GOFC Portal CEOS and other Data Stores Demis WMS Discovery NOAA NGDC ESA NASDA CCRS VMAP0 UMD GLCF MAFF MAFF/NASDA WMS MSU TRFIC JRC Demis (Netherlands) WMS UWM WMS DIF Metadata CCRS/CubeWerx WMS CCRS/CubeWerx Map Client Server GCMD GOFC Portal WMS Fire Risk Map for Southeast Asia from AVHRR Imagery click! click!
Data Search Components EDG Client : NASA Servers : Bureau of Meteorology (Aus) CCRS (Canada) HEOC/NASDA (Japan) DLR (Germany) ESA (Italy) USGS EDC (US) IRE (Russia) ISA (Israel) LARC (NASA-US) ORNL (NASA-US) GSFC (NASA-US) Others ... BOM Australia ESA Italy ORNL NASA DLR Germany CCRS Canada GSFC NASA LARC NASA V0 & CIP HEOC Japan JPL NASA USGS EDC IRE Russia ISA Israel EOSDIS Data Gateway Search Client EOSDIS Data Gateway click! click!
Components MAFF/NASDA WMS ESA/Ionic WFS ESA/Ionic WMS ESA/Ionic Map Client USGS EDC/ESRI WMS Demis WMS Data Feed NOAA NGDC ESA ATSR DMSP AVHRR Data Access & Interuse GISTDA ESA/Ionic WFS MAFF L7 Browse AIT VMAP0 WFS MAFF/NASDA WMS ESA/Ionic WMS USGS EDC/ESRI WMS Demis (Netherlands) WMS ESA/Ionic Map Client WMS WMS WMS Fire Risk Map for Southeast Asia from AVHRR Imagery click! click! click!
WTF/GOFC - Achievements • WTF/GOFC progress in the last 12 months • Employed “nakodo” process to gain mutual understanding of common GOFC/WGISS goals, objectives, requirements • implemented a common set of interfaces for CEOS agency data to meet GOFC needs in terms of: • discovery, • search, • access and interuse • Generated Southeast Asia Fire Prototype capability, • Built significant agency support for WTF/GOFC
Future Work • Make more data sets accessible through common interfaces • Increase number of formats accessible at catalog and data levels • Develop middleware solutions to reduce burden on data providers • Develop linkages to in situ data sets. • Continue interactions between WGISS and GOFC communities leading to enhancement of current interfaces. • Potential expansion of effort • Other regions • Other application areas • Other user communities