Open Data Week @ECMWF

ECMWF | Reading | 28 February - 5 March 2017

Workshop on improving the socio-economic impact of NWP data

28 February - 1 March

Accessibility, ease of use and data policy impact upon the realised value of NWP forecast data, as shown in recent socio-economic impact studies. The workshop provided a forum to discuss the challenges of disseminating meteorological data into the future and how ECMWF and NMSs can ensure that the economic value of weather information can continue to be realised by the private market. The workshop discussed the user needs, the requirement to provide access to fast-growing, large data sets and the available solutions. What are the challenges and costs of ingesting this information? What future opportunities and applications do users foresee for ECMWF forecast data?

The workshop was aimed at policy makers and professionals interested in the evolution of the meteorological industries.

Presentations

The public sector information directive at work: Make open, make available
Kristin Lyng (Norwegian Meteorological Institute)
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WMO and the vision for WIS-2
Matteo dell'Aqua (Météo France) presented by Baudouin Raoult (ECMWF)
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The Copernicus full, free and open data policy
Peter Breger (European Commission)
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State of the meteorological market
Alex Longden (Met Office) 
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The evolution of the ECOMET one-stop shop
Willie McCairns (ECOMET)
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The future of Data Services
Fabio Venuti (ECMWF)
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Understanding the economic benefits of NWP
Daniel Kull (World Bank)
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The NOAA Big Data project: vision and approach
Andy Bailey (NOAA/NWS)
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Evolution of the EUMETSAT Data Services strategy
Lothar Wolf (EUMETSAT)
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Private-sector perspectives on improving the socio-economic impact of weather data
Dennis Schulze (PRIMET)
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Drawing from the experience of Helix Nebula: collaboration between private sector and data providers in the scientific domain
Wolfgang Lengert (ESA)

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Highlights and group discussions

Highlights from the workshop on improving the socio-economic impact of NWP data

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16th Workshop on Meteorological Operational Systems (MOS)

1-3 March

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Providing increasingly large and complex data sets, for scientists and industry to exploit, challenges traditional data centres to look at new technologies and work practices. This goes beyond the mere provision of data but also requires strategies for efficient processing and fast visualisation. Cloud based solutions and moving processing/visualisation to where data is stored are only some possible solutions.

The workshop on Meteorological Operational Systems (MOS) is biennially organised by ECMWF and reviews current and future developments of operational systems at ECMWF and National Weather Services. In 2017, the workshop focussed on how (open) data can be best brought to users. The workshop aimed to review current pull services, such as standardised web services (OGC, INSPIRE) and push services, such as product generation and dissemination. Participants were able to see the state-of-the-art of data service provision and were able to network with key players in this community. The workshop included sessions on operational visualisation systems and the traditional exhibition.

Presentations

ECMWF Data Services
Helene Blanchonnet (ECMWF)

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Copernicus Climate Data Store Toolbox
Angel Alos (ECMWF)
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GEOSS Common Infrastructure and the Big Data challenges
Mattia Santoro (CNR-IIA)
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Accessing Multi-TB-sized Datasets at NCAR’s Research Data Archive
Douglas Schuster (NCAR)

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Technical implementation of the EUMETSAT Data Services Roadmap
Michael Schick (EUMETSAT)
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Drawing from the experience of Helix Nebula: collaboration between private sector and data providers in the scientific domain
Wolfgang Lengert (ESA)
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The NOAA Big Data Project: Vision and approach
Andy Bailey (NOAA/NWS)
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Metview 5.0 and Beyond, to its Pythonic Future
Iain Russell (ECMWF)
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Update on ecFlowUI – visualising complex workflows
Sándor Kértesz (ECMWF)
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Canvas-grid - a new NWP data visualization for NinJo
Sören Kalesse (DWD)
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Visual Weather - The Most Wanted Features
Michal Weis (IBL)
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Ensemble and 3D visualization with Met.3D – recent research and software updates
Marc Rautenhaus (TU Munich)
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Plymouth Marine Laboratory Web Based Geographic Information System
Oliver Clements (PML)
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Windytv and the future of meteorological visualisations
Ivo Lukacovic (Windytv)
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Realizing the value of meteorological data
Glenn Carver (ECMWF)
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Recent developments of the NWP forecast system at DWD, based on ICON and COSMO-DE
Thomas Hanisch (DWD)
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WOW: Crowd Sourced, Citizen Science and Opportunistic Weather Observations at the Met Office
Jake Brown (UK Met Office)
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OGC Open Geospatial Consortium and Met Ocean Domain Working Group
Chris Little (UK Met Office)
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A revolutionary approach to multi-dimensional data access of gridded datasets using current and proposed OGC Web Coverage Service Standards (The Met-Ocean Application Profile)   
Pete Trevelyan (UK Met Office)

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Scaling data access in Visual Weather
Jozef Matula (IBL)
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First experiences of using WC(P)S service at ECMWF
Julia Wagemann (ECMWF)
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Application of web processing services in the climate4impact.eu portal
Ernst de Vreede (KNMI)
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New software developments at ECMWF
Stephan Siemen (ECMWF)
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Maximising user benefit using data streams
Bard Saa (Met Norway)
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SmartMet Server – Providing MetOcean Data
Roope Tervo (FMI)
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Scheduling parallel production in the world of containers
Martin Grønlien Pejcoch (Met Norway)
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Weather forecast improvements at the UK Met Office: responding to the big data challenge
Vicky Pope (UK Met Office)
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JASMIN and the adoption of cloud-native architecture for managing data and compute at scale
Philip Kershaw (STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory)
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Building rich and interactive web applications with CoverageJSON
Jon Blower (University of Reading)
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Developing web services for ECMWF
Sylvie Lamy-Thepaut (ECMWF)
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#OpenDataHack @ECMWF - Beyond weather: explore creative uses of open data

4-5 March

Over 70 developers, data wranglers, scientists and data enthusiasts came to #OpenDataHack @ECMWF to explore creative uses of open weather and climate data.

#OpenDataHack @ECMWF web page