Title: Support for GOES Data Collection System
1Support forGOES Data Collection System
- Presentation to the
-
- Advisory Committee on Water Information
- by Charles Kazimir, Chairperson
- of the
- Satellite Telemetry Interagency Working Group
(STIWG)
2What is the STIWG?
- The GOES Satellite Telemetry Interagency Working
Group (STIWG) is a user group that - Advises NOAA on user requirements of the GOES DCS
related to the collection of hydrologic,
meteorologic, oceanic, and other environmental
data. - Promotes information exchange including the
sharing of data, research, and technical
information among users of the GOES DCS. - Supports improvements to the GOES DCS by funding
development projects. e.g. HDR DCP development.
3STIWG Reports To
-
- Subcommittee on Hydrology of the ACWI
- Committee for Environmental Services, Operations
and Research Needs (C/ESORN) of the Office of the
Federal Coordinator for Meteorology (OFCM).
4What is the GOES DCS?
- The Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellite Data Collection System ( GOES DCS ) is
a satellite system used for the collection of
environmental data in real-time from remote data
recording sites located all over North and South
America. - The GOES DCS is operated by the National
Environmental Satellite Data Information System
(NESDIS ) of NOAA and is available for use by
government agencies and their other
government-sponsored groups.
5GOES DCS as a Critical System
- The GOES DCS started as an experimental system
for collecting real-time data without formal
support. - It has evolved into a critical system that has
become the backbone of many agencies' real-time
data collection systems.
6Components of the GOES DCS
7How important is the GOES DCS?
- The GOES DCS is used extensively by numerous
Federal, State, and local governments as well as
by private organizations to provide current
information about hydrologic, meteorologic, and
oceanic conditions. - The GOES DCS provides a system that allows the
extensive sharing of real-time data among many
different users of environmental data who have
diverse requirements.
8Importance of real-time data collected using GOES
DCS
- Real-time data obtained from remote sites using
the GOES Data Collection System help protect the
lives and property of citizens throughout the
U.S. and much of the Western hemisphere during
fires, floods, hurricanes, tsunamis, and other
natural disasters or severe conditions - Real-time data are used during critical
hydrologic events for such things as flood
forecasting, fire management, tsunami warning,
etc. -
9Wildfire support
Fire fighter support
Helo Operations
10Wildfire support
11USGS GOES Site supplying real-time data during
New England Flooding
12Public Web Hits to Access USGS Real-Time Data
from the GOES DCS
Approaching 1 Million Hits/Day
13The GOES DCS User Community
- Department of Interior(cont)
- Bureau of Reclamation
- National Park Service
- Department of State ( International Boundary
Water Commission) - States
- California
- Colorado
- Many Canadian Environmental agencies
- Many South and Central American Environmental
agencies
- NOAA
- National Weather Service
- National Ocean Service
- National Climatic Data Center
- National Data Buoy Center
- Department of Defense
- United States Army Corps of Engineers
- United States Air Force
- United States Navy
- Department of Interior
- National Interagency Fire Center(NIFC)
- National Forest Service
- Bureau of Land Management
- United States Geological Survey
14Data Collection Platforms reporting through the
GOES DCS in North and Central America
15Why is the STIWG concerned about the GOES DCS?
- No formal commitment by NOAA to operate the GOES
DCS. - For a system this important, the current GOES DCS
has vulnerabilities that need to be addressed. - Processing system is in need of major upgrades.
- Reception system at Wallops Island has no backup.
- COO plan is not comprehensive.
- GOES DCS is considered an ancillary system which
means certain types of failures could be
tolerated by NOAA.
16What this indicates to the STIWG
- The STIWG members believe that, institutionally,
NOAA/NESDIS does not fully appreciate the
importance of this system for environmental
monitoring.
17What the STIWG has done to mitigate some of the
concerns
- Hardware upgrades to reception system
- Contributed funding to upgrade some components of
the system. - Backup system
- Started the development of an Emergency Data
Distribution Network (EDDN) at the Center for
EROS in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. - System will include a receive system for both
GOES East and West satellites - System will be operated by USGS with support from
NESDIS and other STIWG agencies.
18Why this is not enough
- No formal commitment to continue the operations
of the GOES DCS. - No known formal GOES DCS strategic plan for the
continued operations of the GOES DCS including - System upgrades
- Funding support
- No clear strategy for mitigating the effects of
the failure of critical components.
19What the STIWG Wants from ACWI
- Support for recommendations in the following
areas - Continuity of Operations
- Strategic Planning
- Priority of System
20Recommendations for Continuity of Operations
- Recommendation 1
- NOAA/NESDIS should develop a comprehensive COO
plan for the GOES DCS including a strategy for
the loss of each critical component of the
system. - Recommendation 2
- NOAA/NESDIS should continue to work with the
STIWG to closely integrate the Emergency Data
Distribution Network being developed at EROS with
the existing GOES DCS reception sites.
21Recommendation for Strategic Planning
- Recommendation 3
- NOAA/NESDIS, with the collaboration of the STIWG,
should develop a strategic plan that includes - System life cycle planning
- Sources of funding for upgrades and operations
- More formal relationships with the users to
delineate roles and responsibilities.
22Recommendation forPriority of GOES DCS
- Recommendation 4
- NOAA/NESDIS should recognize the importance of
the GOES DCS and elevate its status to a high
priority system with the support this status
implies.
23Summary
- The STIWG believes that the GOES DCS has been and
continues to be an essential resource for
real-time data collection. - Agencies have made large investments in internal
systems that absolutely depend on it. - The extended loss of data from the GOES DCS would
adversely effect the nations ability to forecast
floods, effectively operate flood-control dams
and levees, or issue flood warnings and
evacuation notices. - The GOES DCS needs to be treated as a
high-priority system within NOAA.
24Conclusion
- The GOES DCS has operated well but as a
background system that many praise and all assume
will always be there. - However, operationally it is still viewed as a
low-priority system and has vulnerabilities that
need attention. - The ACWI, by supporting the STIWG's
recommendations, will greatly assist in beginning
the development of the necessary support for the
GOES DCS to insure that it will always be there.