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Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Will Lead Partnership to Establish Coastal and Global Observatories for Ocean Observatories Initiative
Multimillion-dollar program will help transform understanding of the oceans.
The USA National Science Foundation has awarded a $97.7 million contract to an academic partnership led by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), to support the development, installation and initial operation of the coastal and global components of the NSF?s Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI). The WHOI partnership includes Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, and Oregon State University?s College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences. This award completes the management team to construct and implement the $331.5 million OOI Network. OOI is the U.S. science community?s contribution to a broader national and international effort to establish a Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS).
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Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution Will Lead Partnership to Establish
Coastal and Global Observatories for Ocean Observatories Initiative
Multimillion-dollar program will help transform understanding of the oceans
August 23, 2007
CONTACT:
Jon Corsiglia, JOI, 202-232-3900
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WASHINGTON ?The Joint Oceanographic Institutions (JOI) has awarded a
$97.7 million contract to an academic partnership led by the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), to support the development,
installation and initial operation of the coastal and global components
of the National Science Foundation?s Ocean Observatories Initiative
(OOI). The WHOI partnership includes Scripps Institution of
Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, and Oregon
State University?s College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences. This
award completes the management team to construct and implement the
$331.5 million OOI Network.
?This initiative is a major
investment that will transform our understanding of the ocean,? said
JOI President Steven Bohlen. ?It will contribute to tremendous advances
in our understanding of how Earth works.?
The OOI Network
spans global, regional and coastal scales, linked by a system-wide
cyberinfrastructure. The award establishes WHOI and its partners from
Scripps and OSU as the implementing organization for the coastal and
global components of the OOI Network. Each partner will contribute
scientific and engineering expertise to the development of a range of
innovative moored buoys, cabled nodes, and autonomous vehicles that
will provide users with data in real-time or near-real-time, and allow
users to remotely control their instruments and construct virtual
observatories specifically tailored to their scientific needs. The
initial sixty-seven month contract is valued at $97.7 million and
contains options for five years of operation and maintenance, which
would bring total funding for WHOI and its partners to more than $200
million. Raytheon will be providing project management and systems
engineering support to WHOI, and industry partners Technip and Science
Applications International Corporation (SAIC) will be assisting in the
design of a high-performance moored platform for the OOI Network.
?By exploiting technological advances in the fields of in situ sensors,
autonomous vehicles, and cyberinfrastructure, including
telecommunications and networking, the OOI will revolutionize the way
we conduct oceanography,? said Jim Luyten, Acting President and
Director of WHOI. ?These systems will provide us the ability to
continuously monitor the ocean over time and space.?
The
WHOI-led team will design and deploy global buoys to address
planetary-scale problems in critical high latitude locations in the
Northern and Southern hemispheres. A major goal of the global
observatory is to better understand and predict the impact of climate
change on the interlinked ocean-atmosphere system, and on marine
ecosystems, biodiversity and community structure, especially in remote,
poorly sampled parts of the world?s ocean.
?The ability to
make long-term measurements in the coastal and global ocean provides an
opportunity to truly understand ocean variability, hazards, and climate
change in response to natural events and human activity,? said Scripps
Institution of Oceanography Director Tony Haymet.
Permanent
and transportable arrays of buoys and autonomous vehicles will be
deployed off the Pacific Northwest and Mid-Atlantic Bight (initially)
to study coastal processes and to monitor changes in coastal systems.
The aim of the coastal arrays is to understand complex coastal
ecosystems and their critical role in the ecology and biogeochemistry
of the world?s oceans, coastal hazards such as storms and harmful algal
blooms, and the impact of climate change on the coastal ocean.
?By providing real-time, continuous access to the sea through the
Internet, the OOI will transform ocean research and education,? said
Mark Abbott, Dean of OSU/COAS. ?No longer will ocean exploration and
research be limited to scientists; everyone with a connection to the
web -- including students, teachers, decision makers and the general
public -- will be able to have access to these undersea networks.?
JOI published the OOI?s Conceptual Network Design, developed with input
from the research community, in August 2006; a modified version of this
plan was distributed in March 2007. In May 2007, JOI announced awards
to the University of Washington and the University of California, San
Diego, to lead OOI?s regional and cyberinfrastructure components,
respectively. Each partner will contribute to JOI?s ongoing development
of the preliminary design in preparation for a review scheduled for
late 2007. OOI is the U.S. science community?s contribution to a
broader national and international effort to establish a Global Ocean
Observing System (GOOS).
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