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Climate Monitoring from Space -- A Call for an International Architecture

Climate Monitoring from Space -- A Call for an International Architecture. WMO Space Programme Geneva, Switzerland. Overview. Motivation WMO Global Observing System (GOS) – yesterday, today, and tomorrow Key elements in place The Way Forward. Motivation.

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Climate Monitoring from Space -- A Call for an International Architecture

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  1. Climate Monitoring from Space -- A Call for an International Architecture WMO Space Programme Geneva, Switzerland

  2. Overview • Motivation • WMO Global Observing System (GOS) – yesterday, today, and tomorrow • Key elements in place • The Way Forward

  3. Motivation • Policy framework in place (UNFCCC, GFCS) • Expectations are high • Space-agency investments need to be leveraged • Contingency measures exist for weather observations, but not for climate • Observational gaps exist • More coordination is needed

  4. Ten Years Ago . . . “Commitments to address requirements would allow evolution of the GOS that would help characterize the total Earth and climate system on a variety of time and space scales. . . “ From WMO Executive Council LIII, June 2001, Final Report

  5. Five Years Ago . . . www.ceos.org While in situ measurements will remain essential . . . Earth-observation satellites are the only realistic means to obtain the necessary global coverage, and with well-calibrated measurements will become the single most important contribution to global observations for climate.

  6. Evolution of WMO Space-based Global Observing System (GOS) 1961 1978 2009 1990

  7. Space-based Global Observing System Schematic Modified from GEO Secretariat

  8. Satellite Missions in Vision for GOS in 2025 Heritage operational missions • GEO: imager, HS IR sounder, lightning • Sun-synchronous: imager, IR/MW sounders • Ocean surface topography constellation • Radio-Occultation Sounding constellation • Ocean Surface Wind constellation • Global Precipitation constellation • Earth Radiation Budget (incl. GEO) • Atmospheric Composition (incl. GEO) • Ocean colour and vegetation imaging • Dual-angle view IR imagery • Synthetic Aperture Radar • Land Surface Imaging • Space Weather • VIS/IR imagers in HEO • Doppler wind LIDAR, Low-frequency MW • GEO MW • GEO High-resolution narrow-band imagers • Gravimetric sensors Transition from R&D to operational status Operational pathfinders and demonstrators

  9. Funding Estimates From GCOS IP-10 http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/gcos/Publications/gcos-138.pdf

  10. Research/Demo missionsplanning & implementation Instruments Calibration FCDR Satellites Orbits Operational missions planning and implementation FCDR Calibration Instruments Orbits Satellites Building Blocks for an Architecture Observational Capabilities Requirements Drivers User Interfaces Product Generation Activities UNFCCC and IPCC reports GCOSrequirements Requirements and gap analysis Climate data and products management and access ECV related climate products and climate analysis User uptake and feedback Climate System Monitoring Transition planning Otherrequirements(e.g. GFCS) Climate prediction and services

  11. ConsistentCalibrateddata sets Essential Climate products Satellite data Satellites & sensors Users GSICS GOS SCOPE-CM Key Elements in Place • Requirements Gathering and Articulation – GCOS ECVs • System Capabilities and Gaps – WMO Dossier, CEOS MIM • Vision of the Global Observing System (GOS) in 2025 • CEOS Virtual Constellations • CGMS Contingency Planning and Commitments • Global Space-based Inter-calibration System (GSICS) • Quality Assurance Frameworks – QA4EO, WIGOS • Sustained Co-Ordinated Processing of Environmental satellite data for Climate Monitoring (SCOPE-CM)

  12. Great Advances in Weather Forecasts

  13. Similar Advances for Climate? • What will be the analog for climate and will the end-to-end system exist to produce results? • Anomaly correlation of seasonal forecasts? • Correlation of sea-level rise? • ?

  14. The Way Forward • Implement the Vision for the GOS in 2025 • Leverage the end-to-end system that exists for Weather for Climate • Increase coordination and cooperation – recognizing different, but complementary roles and responsibilities

  15. Summary • Key elements in place – must leverage these efforts • Challenges (and opportunities) • Continuity – missions, instruments, measurements • Sustained observations • Increased integration • Both R&D and operational entities are needed for climate monitoring

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