Title: Terrestrial Essential Climate Variables from satellite
1Terrestrial Essential Climate Variables from
satellite (the GCOS process) Alan
Belward European Commission Joint Research
Centre 21020 Ispra (VA) Italy
2GCOS in the UNFCCC Context
considers what can be done to reduce global
warming and how to cope with whatever temperature
increases are inevitable
IPCC assessments help condition UNFCCC reporting
Climate Change is one of the nine
societal-benefits addressed by the GEOSS 10
year implementation plan
3Interaction with Multilateral Environmental
Agreements
- As signatories to the UNFCCC the Parties are
making clear commitments to improved global
environmental governance - This commitment is accompanied by
responsibilities and obligations, which involve
actions by the Parties both individually and
collectively
4e.g., the GCOS Implementation Plan
- Endorsement of the Implementation Plan for the
Global Climate Observing System helps the Parties
meet their responsibilities under Articles 4 and
5 of the UNFCCC - yet this endorsement also brings new
responsibilities i.e. actually implementing the
plan
5Terrestial ECVs
Source IPCC TAR, 2001
6http//www.wmo.ch/web/gcos.
The 2AR reports on status of and weaknesses in
the global networks measuring essential climate
variables
Endorsed by COP9 And by 2003 WMO Congress
7Mission Continuity
- Sensor evolution (backward compatible)
- Unbroken record
- Overlapping record
(Source MODIS 2005 NASA)
(Source Argon 1963 USGS)
(Source UNEP )
8Satellite sensor calibration
Source Carmona Moreno et al. 2005 GCB, 11, 1537 -
1555
- Pre launch calibration to traceable standard
- Post launch vicarious calibration campaigns to
maintain in flight calibration
9In situ instrument calibration
- In situ instrument calibration to the same
traceable standard as used for pre launch
satellite sensor calibration - Cross instrument calibration
(Source G. Zibordi, JRC)
10Definition of variables
- Complete product description needed for users
- Formal International intercomparison using
internationally agreed protocols and benchmarks
(Source N. Gobron, JRC)
11Product Validation
- Sampling and scale issues to be resolved
- In situ measurement schemes
- High Resolution systematic, random, stratified,
aligned
Source Widlowski et al. (2005), JGR, submitted
Source Achard et al. (2002), Science 297, 9
12Liability and accountability
- Internationally accepted institutional framework
- Internationally agreed processes
- Global Climate Observing System/ Global
Terrestrial Observing System - CEOS Cal/Val Working Group WGISS
(Source B. Pinty, JRC)
13Fitness for purpose
(Source Bartholome and Belward, 2005, IJRS 26,
1959 - 1977)
- Accepted accuracy levels
- By both end-users and producers
- Product provenance and ownership
- Defined responsibilities
- validation, revision and maintenance, archive and
distribution
14http//www.wmo.ch/web/gcos
Endorsed by COP10 And progress welcomed at COP11
The GIP proposes remedial action to address the
shortcomings identified in the 2AR
Addresses the climate-change societal benefits
for the GEOSS ten year IP
15GIP actions
- highlight what needs to be done to ensure
current, historic and future records - identify where the responsibilities for
measurement, processing and maintenance
(archival, standards, benchmarking) lie - identify suitable institutional structures
- identify measurable factors to judge progress
over the 5 10 year period - timeframe and costs
http//www.geo.unizh.ch/wgms/index.html
16Satellite needs for climate
- The space agencies, through CEOS, now have to
report to COP 12, stating how they plan to
respond to the GIP - GCOS (with WCRP) is drafting a Supplement to the
GIP - Systematic Observation Requirements for
Satellite-based Products for Climate
17(No Transcript)
18International Agents for Implementation
- Relevant international and intergovernmental
organizations will - undertake coordination and planning for
systematic climate observations where this is not
currently being undertaken - produce plans for their contributions to the
global observing system for climate. - The Parties must ensure that their requirements
for climate observations are communicated to
these international and intergovernmental
organizations. - The international entities then need to report
back to the Partiesthrough the COP/MOP.
19Progress will need more co-ordination
- Networks of laboratories address research issues
(usually) - Agencies and inter agency organisations ensure
continuity and quality of observations
(sometimes) - Intergovernmental processes prepare and issue
regulatory and guidance material for making
observations (occasionally)
20Institutional roles in QA for Climate
- Who sets the standards?
- For cal / val, for geospatial data, for
reporting? - Who applies them?
- Data providers, service providers, end users?
- Who monitors their application?
- The intergovernmental technical commission for
terrestrial observation, measurement and
reporting standards?