Copernicus services Sample Clauses

Copernicus services and in situ development There is risk in attempting to address all six of the Copernicus services along with their sub- components ‘as one’ with respect to in situ data. There is large variation in the maturity across the six services and of their utilisation of observational in situ data, with significant differences in the ways in which the six services operate:  Some utilise in situ observational data routinely, whereas others do not;  Some ingest and manage in situ observational data themselves, whereas others do not;  Some have agreements in place with third party providers, for provision of necessary model data, others do not;  Some utilise ‘open source’ web-services for weather and oceanographic information, which carries the risk that this information source may not be resilient and also that the information may not be of an understood level of quality and assurance;  Some employ third party organisations or contractors for the production of their services, whereas others do not. In some cases, there are linkages between the Copernicus Services, for example between CLMS and CMEMS over the new coastal service, this should facilitate a mutually beneficial exchange of expertise. Other services that cover similar domains appear to operate more autonomously. The six services operate at differing levels of maturity, some established over many years and well linked to utilisation of relevant observational in situ data and with a good understanding of their own requirements, data gaps and issues. Others may have little awareness of what observational data could be available to them and how they could go about accessing and incorporating this into their products and services. Through the process of establishing interviews with the various services and their components, we have experienced a variety of levels of enthusiasm and engagement with the analytic work tasked through the EEA. Some of the more mature services may have felt that they have been asked the same questions before (for example by the GISC project team), whereas for those more recently established, this has been a new process. It is important that we are able to engage all of the services proactively in this process, to demonstrate relevance and express that this work, alongside any needs analysis they may have done themselves will both refresh and re-invigorate progress. The process of expert thematic engagement going forward should therefore be reflective of the differing needs across ...
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Related to Copernicus services

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