Title: Negotiating International Partnerships: The NOAA Perspective
1 Negotiating International Partnerships The
NOAA Perspective
D. Brent Smith Chief, International and
Interagency Affairs NOAA Satellite and
Information Service George Mason University
Short Course on The USG Space Sector October
16, 2008
2Rationale for International Cooperation
- Agencies and nations cannot go it alone
- Clear value in leveraging partners to address
observation gaps and reduce duplication of
effort - Cost-sharing a key factor given high cost of
satellites instruments, platform, launch,
ground segment, data processing and utilization - Force multiplier effect allows partners to
capitalize on each others strengths - Essential in addressing global requirements
- Value of reciprocal data access/data sharing
- Directly linked to active NOAA/USG involvement
and policy leadership in international
coordination mechanisms
3NOAA International Partnerships What Has Worked
- Foreign instrument contributions to POES and
GOES UK (AMSU-B), EUMETSAT
(MHS), France (Argos), Search and
Rescue Satellite System - EUMETSAT provides Metop to NPOESS partnership in
NOAA/EUMETSAT Interim Joint Polar System - ADEOS-1 and -2 (NASDA/JAXA, NASA, CNES)
- RADARSAT-1 (CSA, NASA, NOAA)
- INSAT Data Access (IMD, ISRO, NOAA, NASA)
- Retired GOES-10 satellite repositioned to
transmit data to South America - Operationalized GEONETCast global environmental
information dissemination system - Jason-2 (NASA, NOAA, CNES, EUMETSAT)
4NOAA Bilateral/Multilateral Cooperation
Opportunities
- Jason-3 and follow-on missions NOAA/EUMETSAT
and TBD other partners providing operational
altimetry continuity - Follow-on Joint Polar System cooperation with
EUMETSAT e.g. potential hyperspectral sounder
cooperation - GCOM with JAXA Potential U.S. advanced
scatterometer on GCOM-W-2 AMSR-2 and SGLI would
complement NPOESS MIS and VIIRS - Ocean Surface Vector Winds cooperation with ISRO
and EUMETSAT, and Ocean Color with ISRO, other
TBD partners - NOAA and NASA invited to participate on ESA/JAXA
EarthCAREs Mission Advisory Group - Continued Argos cooperation with CNES
- Interest in RADARSAT-C cooperation with CSA, NASA
and USGS - Exploring expanded cooperation with CONAE and
INPE
5 Potential Impediments to NOAA International
Cooperation Efforts
- Funding constraints/synchronization challenges
among partners (differing budget cycles) - National approval process constraints (C-175
delays) - Institutional/systemic constraints (ITAR, NOAA
budget approval/appropriations process) - Predisposition against cooperation (preference of
one or more key decision makers for
autonomyChinas State Oceanic Administration) - Divergence in data policies, as with differences
in public benefit versus commercial orientation
(RADARSAT-2, ENVISAT SAR)
6Earth Observation Bilateral and Multilateral
Partnerships That Havent Worked
- Proposed merger of SPOT and Landsat (1989
discussions) - NASA/ESA Polar Platform cooperation (vs.
NOAA/EUMETSAT POES and NPOESS cooperation) - NASA and NOAA access to ENVISAT Synthetic
Aperture Radar data (vs. NASA and NOAA access to
ESA ERS-1 and -2 SAR data)
7International Coordination Mechanisms
- 1972- Coordination Group for Meteorological
Satellites (CGMS) - (key technical group, initially geostationary,
now broader focus) - 1984- Committee on Earth Observation Satellites
(CEOS) - 1986-1996 International Coordination Working
Group (ICWG) of the Space Station Partners
(disbanded by mutual agreement) - 1998-2008 Integrated Global Observing Strategy
(IGOS) - (resulting IGOS Themes integrated into GEO
Communities of Practice structure) - 2000- International Charter on Space and Major
Disasters - (NOAA and USGS participate not allowed by State
Department to formally sign Charter) - 2000- World Meteorological Organization
Consultative Meetings on High-Level Policy on
Satellite Matters (annual meeting research space
agencies invited to join operational agencies
linked to WMO Space Program) - 2003- Group on Earth Observations (GEO) an
intergovernmental mechanism established on a
long-term basis in 2005 USGEO coordinates U.S.
participation
8 Global Earth ObservationSystem of Systems
- Group on Earth Observations (GEO) is coordinating
international efforts to build a comprehensive,
coordinated and sustained Global Earth
Observation System of Systems (GEOSS). - Emerging public infrastructure interconnecting a
diverse and growing array of instruments and
systems for monitoring and forecasting changes in
the global environment - A system of systems to support policymakers,
resource managers, science researchers and many
other experts and decision makers - Periodic review of progress through
Ministerial-level Summits - 2008 G8 Heads of State Summit declared intention
to accelerate efforts within GEOSS
9 Global Earth ObservationSystem of Systems
(GEOSS)Earth Observation Summits
- EOS I July 2003, Washington
- 34 Members EC 20 International Organizations
inaugurated GEO concept - EOS II April 2004, Tokyo
- 47 Members EC 26 International Organizations
- EOS III February 2005, Brussels
- Nearly 60 Members EC 34 International
Organizations - 10-Year Implementation Plan
- EOS IV November 2007, Cape Town
- 73 Members EC 46 International Organizations
- Identified early GEO results and Work Plan task
implementation - IGOS Themes incorporated into GEOSS
10 Committee on Earth Observation Satellites (CEOS)
- 28 Member and 20 Associate agencies and
organizations - Best efforts / voluntary organization
- Represents international EO satellite community
- NOAA chairs CEOS Strategic Implementation Team
- As space arm of GEOSS, CEOS and its Agencies are
now pursuing actionable actions and seeking to
achieve demonstrated results with a clear set of
near-term priorities in addressing GEO Tasks - CEOS Virtual Constellations for GEO a
range/number of satellites, which if coordinated
through a partnership have potential for
contributing to a measurable goal in addressing
key observational gaps and bridging multiple GEO
Societal Benefit Areas. Independence of
individual contributions can be maintained - CEOS and its Agencies are also pursuing 59
Climate Actions in support of Global Climate
Observing System (GCOS) implementation,
reportable to the UN Framework Climate Change
Convention (UNFCCC)
11CEOS Virtual Constellations
Current Prototype CEOS Virtual Constellations
New Virtual Constellations Proceeding into
Implementation
Ocean Color Radiometry (OCR)
Ocean Surface Vector Winds (OSVW)
12Summary
- NOAA has benefited greatly through leveraging of
international partnerships (ranging from space
segment collaboration to data sharing) - Funding constraints and other impediments must be
overcome if key near-term international
cooperation opportunities are to be realized - Building on their roles in founding key EO
international coordination mechanisms, it is
important that NOAA and other USG Agencies
maintain U.S. policy leadership in further
helping to shape the global EO system (e.g. full
and open data sharing) - CEOS Constellations and coordinating space agency
commitments show promise in achieving GEOSS and
UNFCCC implementation goals - Key opportunities likely exist through
GEOSS/USGEO, CEOS, CGMS, WMO mechanisms to
further Research to Operations efforts and
achieve continuity of key observations/climate
variables
13 Achieving and Maintaining International
Partnerships
- ..work to identify and maintain mutual
interest.. - ..partners listen to each other and move forward
together..