News Release : Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Will Lead Coastal and Global Observatories EffortPartnership Moves Closer to Implementation of Ocean Observatories Initiative |
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September 2, 2009
Media Relations Office
93 Water Street MS #16
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(508) 289-3340
media@whoi.edu
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Enlarge Image Schematic diagram of the Pioneer Array platforms to deployed in the
Mid-Atlantic Bight. A combination of surface moorings, moored
profilers, AUVs and gliders make up the multi-scale array.
(Jack Cook, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
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Enlarge Image Funded by the National Science Foundation and overseen by the Consortium for Ocean Leadership, the Ocean Observatories Initiative’s goal is to install transformational technology in ocean observatories where it can serve researchers, policymakers and the public. The project includes global, regional, and coastal observing arrays enabled by a dedicated cyberinfrastructure. (Center for Environmental Visualization, University of Washington)
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Enlarge Image The global observing arrays will include instrumented surface moorings, subsurface profiler moorings, and gliders.
The systems will enable sustained atmospheric, physical, biogeochemical, ecological, and
seafloor observations at high latitudes to aid in understanding
critical influences on the global ocean-atmosphere system.
(Jack Cook, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
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| September 2, 2009Source: Media Relations
A Cooperative Agreement signed today by the National Science
Foundation (NSF) and the Consortium for Ocean Leadership (OL) gives Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and its partners approval to begin
construction on ocean observing infrastructure at coastal sites offshore of southern
New England, Oregon, and Washington, and at high latitude open-ocean sites in
the Atlantic, Pacific, and Southern Oceans. The observatories will be built and
installed over the next five years.
The coastal and global arrays are part of the larger Ocean
Observatories Initiative (OOI). Funded
by NSF and managed by OL, the visionary infrastructure project establishes a
network of global, regional, and coastal observatories, linked by a system-wide
cyberinfrastructure, to actively observe complex ocean processes such as
climate variability, ocean circulation, and ocean acidification across a range
of spatial scales at critical coastal, open-ocean, and seafloor locations.
“Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution is delighted to be a part of this transformational
and unprecedented endeavor. We are committed to building and maintaining the
OOI infrastructure for the ocean science community,” said WHOI President and
Director Susan K. Avery. “With an interactive connection to the ocean and near
real-time access to data from hundreds of sensors at key locations around the
globe, we believe this project will lead to major advances in our understanding
of essential Earth processes, such as the global carbon cycle, and help us
address global scientific and societal issues including climate change,
changing ocean chemistry, and the health of our oceans and marine ecosystems.”
A 2007 award established WHOI and its partners, Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and Oregon State University, 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 an innovative approach using moored buoys 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. Off Oregon some of the moored buoys will
connect to the cable of the Regional Scale network being implemented by the
University of Washington. Corporate partner Raytheon will provide project
management and systems engineering support.
“Bringing together three of the premier, sea-going
oceanographic research and education institutions in the U.S. has allowed WHOI
to forge a team with the expertise and the personnel needed to design, build,
and maintain innovative new observing platforms for community use,” said Robert
Weller, a WHOI physical oceanographer and leader on the project. “NSF has made a remarkable commitment
to ocean sciences not only by funding the design but also by planning for a
25-30 year operation of the coastal arrays on both the east and west coasts,
while maintaining four high latitude, deep ocean arrays, two in the northern
hemisphere and two in the southern hemisphere.”
WHOI and Scripps will design and deploy global moorings to
investigate multidisciplinary regional processes and the role of the ocean at
critical high latitude locations. 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.
WHOI will work with OSU to prepare and deploy the coastal
“Endurance Array,” two lines of moorings off Oregon and Washington; and WHOI
will tackle the “Pioneer Array” in the Mid-Atlantic Bight. 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.
The newly signed Cooperative Agreement comes at the end of a
design and management review process and initiates the flow of funding to begin
construction. The five-year construction phase will begin in September, with
nearly $18 million of first-year funds for the coastal and global observatories
coming from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The expected
budget requests for construction of the coastal and global nodes of the OOI in
FY 2010 and beyond total approximately $101 million.
“This long-awaited investment will
help us better understand the science of the ocean. It will allow us to monitor
complex oceanic phenomena such as red tide, track our changing climate,
preserve and protect our important ecosystems and maintain the health of the
region’s vital fishing grounds,” said U.S. Senator John Kerry. “My colleagues
and I have been pushing for this funding for years – it’s refreshing to finally
have an administration that understands and appreciates the positive impact
science can have on our economy and our environment.”
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts has provided matching
funds through the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MTC) John Adams
Innovation Institute (JAII) to enhance ocean-observing capabilities at the
“Pioneer array” on the New England Shelf.
“Massachusetts sets national
standards in marine science, technology and innovation and these new
observatories represent an essential opportunity to focus our collective
strengths,” said Massachusetts Secretary for Housing and Economic Development
Greg Bialecki. “This federal funding is critically important in advancing our
global leadership in academia and the knowledge-based economy.”
Massachusetts Secretary Energy and
Environmental Affairs Ian Bowles agreed. “Massachusetts has long been a leader
in ocean research, and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution a leader among
leaders,” said Bowles. “And in launching the nation’s first comprehensive ocean
management process for state waters, Massachusetts has much to gain from new
ocean science. I congratulate WHOI, and I could not be more pleased to see this
ocean observing system get underway with their vital participation.”
The expected benefits to
Massachusetts and New England include:
• Better scientific information
for public coastal managers to manage ocean resources and commercial fisheries,
predict harmful algal blooms (“red-tide”), and mitigate the hazards from oil
spills or coastal storm inundation;
• Improved assessments of the
impact of longer-term climate change on the region;
• More accurate weather forecasts
and storm prediction;
• Increased ability to balance and
preserve coastal environmental resources, protecting recreational areas
• Enhanced academic-industry
partnerships that will stimulate the development of new data products and
advanced technologies in the Marine Science & Technology cluster (e.g.,
autonomous robotic underwater vehicles, sensors, self-powered moorings,
underwater communication and anti-fouling technologies).
“This is not just another big step
for the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, it is a huge leap forward in
bringing the information revolution to the sea,” said U.S. Representative
William Delahunt. “The funds will boost our understanding of the ocean and
climate change, while providing valuable tools to help us manage exciting new
uses of the sea, such as offshore wind, wave and tidal energy.”
“The ocean is our last great
frontier, and holds the answers to a myriad of questions about our planet.
Giving world-renowned organizations like WHOI the tools necessary to collect
the data will allow for a new age of discovery,” said Massachusetts Senate
President Therese Murray. “The fact that with this construction, we will be one
step closer to collecting this important data is very exciting.”
The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution is a private,
independent organization in Falmouth, Mass., dedicated to marine research,
engineering, and higher education. Established in 1930 on a recommendation from
the National Academy of Sciences, its primary mission is to understand the
oceans and their interaction with the Earth as a whole, and to communicate a
basic understanding of the oceans’ role in the changing global environment.
Last updated: January 13, 2010 |