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Global Earth Observations

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Title: Global Earth Observations


1
Global Earth Observations
  • Charles F. Kennel
  • Director, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
  • January 2004

With thanks to Lisa Shaffer, John Orcutt, Larry
Smarr, Ed Frieman
2
Humans have transformed the earth in the last 50
years
City Lights from Space
Water, ozone, global air pollution, climate
change, ecosystems
3
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4
Predicting climate on seasonal-to-interannual
timescales
  • Understanding climate variability on
    seasonal-to-interannual timescales offers some
    of the most direct benefits In particular,
    better prediction of precipitation is of special
    interest for water and energy resource
    management, agriculture, and a variety of other
    factors related to general human well-being.
  • Global Environmental Change Research Pathways
    for the Next Decade, NRC, 1998

5
Biology and biogeochemistry of ecosystems
  • The ecosystems of the world are critical
    foundations of human society. People depend on
    ecosystems extensively for goods and services,
    such commodities as food, construction materials,
    and pharmaceuticals. Humanitys dependence on
    the biosphere for climate regulation, air
    quality, and clean water has become starkly
    apparent.
  • Global Environmental Change Research Pathways
    for the Next Decade, NRC, 1998

6
Decadal-Century Climate Changes
  • Determining the role of anthropogenic forcing
    is inseparable from understanding the natural
    system. specifically, greater knowledge is
    needed of tropospheric aerosols and the carbon
    cycle. The subtlety of slow change over long
    timescales can disguise its potential long-term
    severity and thus societys willingness to
    address potential problems in advance.
  • Global Environmental Change Research Pathways
    for the Next Decade, NRC, 1998

7
Change in the Chemistry of the Atmosphere
  • Atmospheric chemistry provides the scientific
    foundations to understand a number of phenomena
    that are part of global change including
    changes in UV dosage at the Earths surface,
    change in acid levels of deposition in a variety
    of ecosystems Work on the chemistry of the
    atmosphere provides hard examples of how the
    scientific method can succeed in guiding public
    policy.
  • Global Environmental Change Research Pathways
    for the Next Decade, NRC, 1998

8
Human Dimensions
  • The human consequences of global change are due
    at least as much to the social systems that
    produce vulnerability as to the environmental
    changes themselves.
  • Global Environmental Change Research Pathways
    for the Next Decade, NRC, 1998

9
Earth System Science
  • In addition to dealing with eons past, earth
    science has a new focus on the geological here
    and now- predict the next hundred years.
  • We are creating an interdisciplinary panorama of
    the earth as it is today and as it will be
    tomorrow.
  • We are taking into account the human activities
    that influence earths systems
  • Earth system science can now make useful
    forecasts in fields beyond weather
  • The entire enterprise requires an earth observing
    system of global scale

10
Global Earth Observing System
  • Human Architecture
  • Multi-Sensor Networks
  • Cyber-Infrastructure
  • Decision-Support Systems

11
Human Architecture
  • Global Change Research Act of 1990
  • Calls for global measurements, establishing
    worldwide observations necessary to understand
    the physical, chemical, and biological processes
    responsible for changes in the Earth system on
    all relevant spatial and time scales, as well as
    documentation of global change, including the
    development of mechanisms for recording changes
    that will actually occur in the Earth system over
    the coming decades.
  • International Global Observing Strategy
  • (OSTP, July 17, 1995)
  • The Global Observing System would be an
    internationally coordinated system of mutually
    funded experimental and operational space-based
    and in situ data acquisition, archive, and
    distribution systems and programs for earth
    observations and environmental monitoring.

12
Human Architecture
  • Declaration of the Earth Observation Summit
  • We, the participants in this Earth Observation
    Summit held in Washington, DC, on July 31, 2003
    Affirm the need for timely, quality, long-term,
    global information as a basis for sound decision
    making.
  • Observing the Future Industry Meeting on Earth
    Observations, January 28, 2004

13
Multi-Sensor Networks
  • Remotely sensed and in situ
  • Spacecraft, aircraft, ships, moorings, floats,
  • Radars, lidars, physical, chemical and
    biological sensors
  • Oceans, atmosphere, land, ice
  • Global to regional to local

14
NASAs Earth Sensorweb
The Earth Sensorweb Concept Involves Satellites
Working In Intelligent Constellations, Adapting
To Observed And Modeled Changes And Delivering
Tailored Information Products From Space To
Science Users
15
NSF Ocean Observatory Networks
16
NOAA/DOD/NASA National Polar Orbiting Operational
Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS)
17
Cyber-Infrastructure
  • Information management and architecture

Computing
Modeling
18
Cyber-Infrastructure Enabled Science Engineering
NSF Report on Revolutionizing Science and
Engineering through Cyber-Infrastructure (Atkins
Report) www.communitytechnology.org/nsf_ci_report
/
High-performance computing
for modeling, simulation, data
processing/mining
Humans
Instruments for
observation and
characterization.
Individual
Global Connectivity
Group Interfaces
Physical World
Visualization
Facilities for activation,
manipulation and
Collaboration
construction
Services
Knowledge management
institutions for collection building
and curation of data, information,
literature, digital objects
19
Beyond Indicators to Decision-Support Tools
  • If we connect GEO to effective decision support
    systems, then it will become a principal tool for
    achieving sustainability on a global scale.

20
Global Observations - Global Decisions
  • Food
  • Energy
  • Poverty alleviation
  • Human health
  • Species and ecosystems
  • Water
  • Economic growth and equity
  • Population

21
Global Observations - Local Decisions
  • Avoid loss of life and property from severe
    events and natural hazards
  • Longer-term risk management
  • Infrastructure management
  • Resource allocation decisions
  • Finance and budgeting understanding seasonality
    anticipating emergency preparedness and response
  • Siting of facilities
  • Design and landscaping water and energy use
  • Construction and property maintenance,
    engineering
  • Public relations/ marketing/communications
  • Operations when to plan production to harvest
    to schedule promotional events
  • Regulatory compliance
  • Travel and routing
  • Emergency preparedness
  • -- derived from NOAA report on Tourism by Mary
    Altalo et al, SAIC 2002

22
Climate variations
El Nino North
Pacific Oscillation (NPO)
23
affect energy
supply
demand
24
and therefore decisions.
Environment vs. Hydropower
Urban vs. Agriculture
Long term contracts vs. Spot market
25
Why does California need observing systems?
  • Improve energy management
  • Forecast changes in water availability
  • Forecast water quality at Californias beaches
  • Management of coastal resources

26
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27
From Global Ocean Data To Peoples Lives
Data Assimilation
Altimetry
XBT
Ocean Heat/freshwater Storage
Feedback To Atmosphere
Climate/weather Predictions
Information about Agriculture, Sea Level, Health
28
Short Term Climate and Energy Consumption Big
events can change load by 500 MW (gt1 of total).
Direct cost of this power 250K/breeze day (40
days/year 10M/year)
Sep 25, 2002 No delta breeze winds carrying hot
air down California Central valley. Power
consumption high.
29
California Energy Security ProjectTim Barnett,
David Pierce Scripps Inst. Oceanography Universit
y of Washington Georgia Inst. Tech PacifiCorp SAIC
California Energy Commission California
ISO San Diego Gas Elec. SoCal Gas
Delta Breeze
Sep 26, 2002 Delta breeze starts up power
consumption drops gt500 MW compared to the day
before!
30
Water-Energy interaction
31
A small temperature change could mean a big
change in water availability from the Sierra
Nevada
32
San Diego Coastal Ocean Observing System
Monitoring the Health of San Diego Coastal Waters
California Clean Beach Initiative Partners
academic scientists (SIO) with end users (City of
Imperial Beach, County Department of Health,
Regional Water Quality Board)
33
Combination of HF RADAR CURRENTS with OCEAN COLOR
satellite data 2/5/03
34
70 decline of Zooplankton biomass with 1.2
1.4 ºC warming increased thermal
stratification
High resolution spatial maps of fish egg
distributions used for resource management
black sardine eggs red anchovy eggs
Roemmich and McGowan
Checkley et al.
35
Evolving Role of the Science Community
Originating science, creating models,
developing observing technologies Designing
observing strategies and systems
Transferring designs, technologies, models, and
tested systems to the public and private
sectors Partnering in the governance and
management of long-term observing and decision
support systems Infusing new objectives and
technologies into on-going systems Linking new
capabilities to new users
Universities are becoming more multi-disciplinary
and service-oriented
36
New Management Concepts are Required
  • System of systems
  • Multi-sector consortia
  • Standards
  • Interoperability
  • Open communication
  • Evolving, adaptive

37
The Grand Convergence
  • The convergence of earth science and information
    technology will lead to continuous awareness of
    earths systems and their interactions with human
    activities.
  • We will use continuous awareness to manage our
    resources and environment, and our response to
    disasters
  • Continuous awareness will promote integrated
    responses to emerging global environmental
    challenges

38
Observe Globally
Model Regionally
Act Locally
39
Think Globally
Model Regionally
Observe Locally
40
What we do in the next fifty years will determine
our planet's environmental destiny
Girl on beach, next 10 years .
What we do in the next ten years will determine
what is possible in the next fifty
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