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Rescue and Digitization of Meteorological and Hydrological Data Project

Rescue and Digitization of Meteorological and Hydrological Data Project. Funded by the Caribbean Development Bank. Implemented by the Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology. Draft Report Database Management Consultant. Consultant – Mr. Paul Whitfield (Canada )

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Rescue and Digitization of Meteorological and Hydrological Data Project

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  1. Rescue andDigitization of Meteorological and Hydrological Data Project Funded by the Caribbean Development Bank Implemented by the Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology

  2. Draft ReportDatabase Management Consultant • Consultant – Mr. Paul Whitfield (Canada) • Protocols and Policies for data sharing and dissemination • Summarized interviews with… • … five member countries – Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, St. Lucia, Antigua and Barbuda, Jamaica • …CIMH • …Data Design Team

  3. Main Issues • Sovereignty and data ownership • Value of data • Others related to station numbering and database mirroring

  4. Database Procedures • More rigorous checking of additions to the database needs to be implemented e.g. all “insert data” actions must confirm an existing station number • Data transfer must be done institution to institution rather than person to person • A change management mechanism is needed to capture corrections made in home country databases, so that CIMH are holding a backup copy and not a divergent copy.

  5. Policy for Exchange of Data Individual Meteorological Services need to know who is using their data and how. Need to establish ownership and user expectations. • A Memorandum of Understanding between CIMH and each data contributor should be developed so that scope and parameters of the ‘sharing’ of data is clear to both parties • CIMH must be able to inform Individual Meteorological Services of requests for data. • Create a user agreement that clearly indicates to the requestor the limits and requirements that accompany the receipt of the data – including ownership

  6. Policy for Metadata Metadata are generally unavailable and not specifically locatable • a common computer system for documenting inspections, equipment, methods would be a valuable addition to QMS implementations and also to the documentation of climate observations. • Documentation of station location and changes should be created and maintained

  7. Cost Recovery None of the Meteorological Services can recover costs of providing data into their operating budgets. If they do recover costs it goes to government ‘general revenues’ • The recovery of the costs of providing data would have to align with the needs and wishes of individual Meteorological Services • Profits from such a service would have to be reinvested at CIMH, either in making the database sustainable, improving calibration services, or offsetting contributions

  8. Plan for Sustainability (i)Data provided outside country’s jurisdiction – sovereignty issue (ii) There is a general support of specific cost recovery should it offset costs or be invested in sustaining the database and data rescue • Develop a MOU or other instrument that would address the Sovereignty Issues involved in the shift of responsibility of data provision from an individual Meteorological Service to CIMH. • CIMH must ensure that they can deliver regional products from their portal and not just data for individual countries.

  9. Models of Web Access Limit the number of export data types to one or two of the most commonly used. Develop common functionality available through the web portal for users and NMSs. • Export selected raw data only in either *.CSV or *.TXT formats • Develop common functionality for web portal products that meets needs of NMSs and user community

  10. Backup and Mirroring NMSs rely on local copies and human involvement in backups. Offsite backups if they exist are ad-hoc. NMSs are aware of mirroring, but it seems to be viewed as a costly alternative. • Where countries have invested in CLIDATA, their investment should not be abandoned. An investment in mirroring the Oracle database at CIMH coupled with a transfer mechanism to ingest CLIDATA DBMS into the new system is warranted • Where countries are reliant on CLICOM, CLIMSOFT, or locally created software, a copy of the new DBMS which has sufficient functionality to support office operations should be provided to NMS to provide a basis for mirroring and exchange.

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