Overview of AMS Commission on the Weather and Climate Enterprise : Overview of AMS Commission on the Weather and Climate Enterprise
Slide2 : NRC Committee Formed in 2001 at the request of NOAA/NWS
Decades of evolving policy regarding weather services have produced two results for the U.S.
1. Scope and diversity of services second to none
2. Overlapping roles and occasional friction between NWS and private service providers.
Study conclusions
The NRC Committee judged this friction to be an acceptable price to pay for excellent weather services,
but also concluded that it could be ameliorated.
Slide3 : Report Contained 11 recommendations
Recommendation 3
The NWS and relevant academic, state, and private organizations should seek a neutral host, such as the American Meteorological Society, to provide a periodic dedicated venue for the weather enterprise as a whole to discuss issues related to the public-private partnership.
Slide4 : A New Commission For The
American Meteorological Society Approved
Guidelines : Guidelines
The Commission provides venues for enterprise participants to meet and discuss issues of importance to the enterprise. All findings and reports resulting from Commission activities are directed to the AMS Council.
The Commission and its activities facilitate dialogue between enterprise participants.
Commission activities operate within the overall mission of the American Meteorological Society as a scientific and professional society.
Council Approved (Sep 05) Terms of Reference for Weather and Climate Enterprise Commission : Council Approved (Sep 05) Terms of Reference for Weather and Climate Enterprise Commission Membership :
A Commissioner (three-year term on rotating basis from each sector)
The Chairpersons of the constituent Committees/Boards
Special Responsibilities and Authority:
To develop and implement programs that address the needs and concerns of all sectors of the weather and climate enterprise;
promote a sense of community among government entities, private sector organizations, and universities;
foster synergistic linkages between and among the sectors;
entrain and educate user communities on the value of weather and climate information;
and provide appropriate venues and opportunities for communications that foster frank, open, and balanced discussions of points of contention and concern.
Venues & Outreach : Venues andamp; Outreach Venues for the topic discussions will have a variety of formats-
Workshops
Special Symposia
Conference Sessions
Web casts
Outreach activities to help identify user needs and promote the capabilities of the meteorological community include-
Sponsoring corporate fora
Promoting support andamp; services to weather sensitive industries
Advertising at tradeshows
Fostering favorable policies andamp; procedures
Establishing a more prominent web presence for internal communication within the community on topics of interest, outcome of workshops, and other Commission activities.
Venues & Outreach : Venues andamp; Outreach www.ametsoc.org
AMS Commission on theWeather and Climate Enterprise : AMS Commission on the Weather and Climate Enterprise Fair Weather report recommendation 3: The NWS and relevant academic, state, and private organizations should seek a neutral host, such as the American Meteorological Society, to provide a periodic dedicated venue for the weather enterprise as a whole to discuss issues related to the public-private partnership. The Enterprise Commission will go well beyond the Fair Weather recommendation, to consider relevant issues throughout the enterprise and not just those associated with the NWS.
Slide10 : The National Weather and
Climate Enterprise
The Weather and Climate Enterprise : The Weather and Climate Enterprise The nation’s weather and climate enterprise is conducted by many parties who provide information to many who use this information. For convenience in exposition, the providers are typically grouped into three sectors – government, private sector, and the academic community – although the enterprise as a whole includes non-governmental organizations, international organizations, private citizens, and others. Each of the three provider 'sectors' is quite diverse: Government includes federal agencies (both civilian and military), as well as agencies at the state and local level. The private sector includes weather companies, practitioners working for private companies or as consultants, broadcasters, risk managers, and others. The academic sector includes both private and public educational institutions and specially chartered research organizations of various types. The community is also diverse on the user side, including a broad range of weather sensitive economic sectors (energy, agriculture, and transportation, to name three) as well as private citizens. In recognition of the breadth and diversity of these communities of providers and users of weather and climate information the use of the term 'weather and climate enterprise' encompasses all participants
Slide12 : A New Commission For The
American Meteorological Society Approved
Commission Steering Committee : Commission Steering Committee Will consist of community leaders and the leaders of groups representing users of meteorological information plus members at large, meeting twice yearly
Purpose of the CSC is to provide a forum for identification and discussion of issues of interest or concern to the meteorological community as a whole
Will normally refer items requiring further action to one of the boards of the Commission
Members of the AMS Weather and Climate Enterprise Commission Steering Committee as of 1/28/06 : Members of the AMS Weather and Climate Enterprise Commission Steering Committee as of 1/28/06
Voting members by position (4)
George Frederick, CSC Chair, WCEC Commissioner
Bill Mahoney, BEED Chair
Terry Tarbell, BEP Chair
Matt Parker, CCM, BEC Chair
Senior members (voting) from the provider community (7)
Dr. Joel Myers, President and Founder of Accuweather
BGen DL Johnson, Director, NWS
TBD (Govt.)
Ray Ban, Sr. VP The Weather Channel
Steve Root, CCM, President WeatherBank andamp; President CWSA
Chris Bedford, CCM, Sailing Weather Services and President NCIM
Bob Ryan, CCM, Chief Broadcast Meteorologist, NBC4 Senior members (voting) from the user community (5)
Kevin Stewart, Chair of the National Hydrologic Warning Council
Dr. Denise Stephenson Hawk, The Stephenson Group
Dr. Mike Carter, DHS
John Stults, Western Governors Assn andamp; State of Montana
TBD (Senior industry leader, ITT, LM, Raytheon, etc)
At-large members (voting) to ensure diversity (4)
James Baker, Ret NOAA Administrator
Dr. John Snow, CCM, Dean, College of Atm andamp; Geogr Sciences, University of Oklahoma
Kevin Lavin, Executive Director NWA
Dr. Susan Avery, CCM, University of Colorado
Non-voting members by position
Walt Lyons, CCM, President AMS
Keith Seitter, CCM, Executive Director AMS
John Toohey-Morales, CCM, Professional Affairs Commissioner
Brad Colman, STAC Commissioner
Julie Ann Winkler, Education and Human Resources Commissioner
Commission Boards : Commission Boards Board on Enterprise Planning (BEP) strategic, long term focus; annual topic with ~2-year cycle time on studies
Board on Enterprise Communication (BEC) internal focus; will provide venues to bring together the meteorological community to learn about, discuss, and provide input concerning issues of short-term nature and of immediate interest to the community
Board on Enterprise Economic Development (BEED) external focus. will grow the economic base of the weather and climate enterprise by reaching out to the community of users, broadly defined
Organizational Structure of the Commission on the Weather and Climate Enterprise : Organizational Structure of the Commission on the Weather and Climate Enterprise
The Enterprise Commission : The Enterprise Commission Provides venues for discussion
Not a federal advisory committee
Facilitates dialog between enterprise participants
Not a mediator or adjudicator of disputes
Operates within Society’s mission
Not a trade association
On Being a Neutral Host : On Being a Neutral Host We must not compromise our ability to be a neutral host for enterprise discussions
Balance is an important key
Committee and board appointments
Council composition
How we seek input and act on it
Ongoing & Future Activities : Ongoing andamp; Future Activities Current/Recent—
Dialog on current hot topics
AMS Web Forum
Cosponsor 'Weather Prediction Enterprise Community Meeting', Boulder 26-28 July 2005
Commission Steering Committee meeting #1andamp;2, 26 July 2005, 28 Jan 2006
January 2006 — Activity at AMS Annual Meeting
Policy Forum on Partnership success stories
Users Conference—Transportation, Retail Trade, Energy
March 2006 — AMS Corporate Forum (BEED)
Jan-Apr 2006—Established 1st annual partnership topic (APT) (BEP)
26-30 June 2006 — Community Meeting (BEC)
In planning—
During 2006—Establish 2nd annual partnership topic (BEP)
January 2007—Commission fully fleshed out
2007—Users Forum, Corporate Forum, Community Summit, Partnership Topic, etc
Slide20 : A New Commission For The
American Meteorological Society Approved
BEP Charter : BEP Charter Review issues identified by the Steering Committee that are of long-term strategic nature with importance to the enterprise as a whole
Focus on a selected topic annually
Annual Partnership Topic
Working Group for a specific topic
Annual Report to Steering Committee
BEP Membership : BEP Membership
Chair
13 members at large
3 Working Groups [WGs]
WG membership: Private, academic, and public sectors; user community
First WG: Tim Spangler, Don Winter, Bruce Telfeyan
Annual Partnership Topic [APT] : Annual Partnership Topic [APT]
Purpose
Topic Selection
Nominal Calendar Of Events
Topic Selection Criteria
BEP Functions
Steering Committee Functions
Annual Partnership Topic Purpose : Annual Partnership Topic Purpose Give all interested parties an opportunity to express their views on the selected topic
Summarize those views in a concise report
Identify consensus views when such consensus exists
Clarify differences of opinion when consensus does not exist
Offer recommendations to AMS itself and the enterprise as a whole based on the understanding of views gained during the study
APT Selection : APT Selection Annual Partnership Topic will be selected based on nominations received by AMS during an open nomination period
Selection based on published selection criteria
Selection made by Commission Steering Committee
Any party may submit a nomination
All nominations will be available for comment
Annual Partnership Topic Nominal Calendar of Events : Annual Partnership Topic Nominal Calendar of Events Year One:
Annual AMS Meeting – Issue call for nominations
Spring – Open comment period
Summer – Select topic, charge WG
Remainder of Year – Organize activities for Year Two
Year Two:
Annual AMS Meeting – Frame topic
Remainder of Year – Conduct activities appropriate to topic
Year Three:
Annual AMS Meeting – Conduct summary session on topic
Summer – WG presents final report for review/approval
Fall – Publish final report
Annual Partnership Topic Topic Selection Criteria : Annual Partnership Topic Topic Selection Criteria Timeliness [30%]
Results of partnership topic activities must be relevant to the weather and climate enterprise in relation to a 2-3 year timeline
Topics which require results more rapidly will be rejected
Topics which have longer time frames will be considered
Breadth [25%]
Partnership topic will have broad impact and interest
Breadth judged on two factors:
Sectoral breadth [60%] [private, academic, government]
Disciplinary breadth [40%] [scientific, policy, etc]
Annual Partnership Topic Topic Selection Criteria : Annual Partnership Topic Topic Selection Criteria Impact [20%]
Impact it is expected to have on the weather and climate enterprise and on society as a whole
May be evaluated in
Tangible terms [e.g., fraction of the U.S. economy affected]
Intangible terms [e.g., potential legal effects]
Interest [15%]
Estimate of the likelihood of:
Success in forming topic Working Group
Gaining multiple contributors to the topic
Linkage [10%]
Potential linkage to other planned activities [e.g., topic related to a planned activity by an organization other than AMS]
Annual Partnership Topic BEP Functions : Annual Partnership Topic BEP Functions Organize the APT nomination process
Issue call, make public, collect comments
Evaluate nominations
'Score' each nomination
Draft charge for Topic Committee
Fill the Topic Committee
Review Report
Submit report to Steering Committee
Annual Partnership Topic Steering Committee Functions : Annual Partnership Topic Steering Committee Functions Select Annual Partnership Topic
Finalize Charge to Topic Committee
Approve Final Report
Annual Partnership Topic in 2006-7 : Annual Partnership Topic in 2006-7 Feasibility of Multi-Partner, Multifunctional Mesoscale Observing Networks
Slide32 : A New Commission For The
American Meteorological Society Approved
Slide33 : Board on Enterprise Communication 'The BEC will provide appropriate venues to bring together the provider and user communities to learn about, discuss, and provide input concerning issues of a short-term nature identified by the Steering Committee.
Venues may take a wide variety of formats, including workshops, special symposia, and conference sessions, depending on the nature and time-sensitivity of the topic to be discussed.'
BEC Initiatives : BEC Initiatives Ad Hoc Committee on Climate Services Formed
Ad Hoc Planning Committee for Annual Community Meeting Being Formed
Action Plan for helping develop Community Priorities with Weather Coalition and other organizations
Community Outreach for CWEC
BEC Members : BEC Members Considerations:
1. Represent three sectors: Government, Academic, Private/commercial
2. Women and minorities
3. 'New blood'
Recommendations were used very successfully.
Ad Hoc Committee on Climate Services : Ad Hoc Committee on Climate Services Co-Chairs
Ed O’Lenic from NOAA
Jan Null, Golden Gate Weather Services, Inc.
Membership 10-12 on Committee
Determine venue / meeting types
Slide37 : A New Commission For The
American Meteorological Society Approved
Mission : Mission To promote growth in the economic base of the weather and climate enterprise by outreach to user communities.
History : History Prior to the formation of the Commission, the BEED was the AMS Economic Development Committee, which reported to the AMS Executive Committee.
BEED Organization : BEED Organization External Focus
Board Members : Board Members As of January 2006
Name Affiliation Term Expiration
Chair, Bill Mahoney UCAR 2008
1. Bill Bergen Raytheon 2007
2. Heidi Cullen The Weather Channel 2007
3. Kathy Lucas Sonalysts 2007
4. Jean Vieux Vieux andamp; Associates 2007
5. Greg Wilson Baron Environmental Services 2008
6. Josh Foster NOAA 2008
7. Brenda Philips ECS/UMASS 2008
8. Jim O’Sullivan NOAA 2008
9. Bill Graham NASA 2009
10. Jan Dutton AWS 2009
11. John Zack MESO, Inc. 2009
12. Pam Emch Northrop 2009
Ex Officio Members:
Chair, AMS Surface Transportation and ITS – Paul Pisano (FHWA)
Chair, Energy Committee – Jon Davis (Chesapeake Energy)
Board Committees : Board Committees In June 2006, two planning committees were formed from BEED members to help plan the Corporate and Users Forums.
Corporate Forum : Corporate Forum
Brings together several key members of the community, government agencies, and policy makers, to discuss ongoing programs, new initiatives, and policy issues. The overall goal of the Forum is to identify business opportunities.
Next Corporate Forum: March 2007
2006 Corporate Forum : 2006 Corporate Forum Participants include:
Federal Government Agencies
- NOAA - Congressional Staff
- NASA - DHS
- DOT
2006 Topics
GOESS - NOAA Organic Act
IOOS - Future Air Transport System
Public/Private Partnership - DOT/RITA
National Competitiveness Initiative - Federal Budget Outlook
NOAA Climate Services
Hurricane Response
Users Forum : Users Forum
Brings together Industry users and the weather and climate enterprise. Speakers asked to focus on industry needs for weather and climate information, recent successes and failures in the use of products, and other aspects of products and services as they relate to the end user and decision maker.
2006 Users Forum : 2006 Users Forum Focus: Retail and Energy Industries
Participants included:
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
Shell Oil
The Home Depot
Wal-Mart
NOAA/NSF Societal Impacts Program
ITS & Surface Transportation Weather Committee : ITS andamp; Surface Transportation Weather Committee As of January 2006
Name Affiliation Term Expiration
Chair, Paul Pisano FHWA 2008
1. Ed Boselley Weather Solutions Group 2007
2. Jean Vieux Vieux andamp; Associates 2007
3. Mike Rosetti Volpe 2007
4. Jean Vieux Vieux andamp; Associates 2007
5. Bob Hart Meridian Environmental Technologies 2008
6. Brooke Pearson Vaisala 2009
7. Renee McPherson Oklahoma State University 2009
8. Robert Hallowell MIT Lincoln Lab 2009
9. Mike Campbell NOAA 2009
10. Kevin Petty NCAR 2009
11. Pat Welsch University of North Florida 2009
12. Ralph Patterson Utah DOT 2009
Ex Officio Members:
Chair, Weather Information andamp; Applications Special Interest Group, Intelligent Transportation Society of America – Art Handman (Ret. Hartford Transit Authority)
Energy Committee : Energy Committee As of 10 July 2006
Name Affiliation Term Expiration
1. Chair, Jon Davis Chesapeake Energy 2009
2. Josh Dar RMS 2009
3. Dave Changnon Northern IL University 2009
4. Adam Stevens Citigroup 2009
5. Marc Swartz NREL 2008
6. Patrick Walsh TVA 2008
7. Ken Reeves AccuWeather 2008
8. Robert Mulloy Shell 2008
9. Beth Stump Chevron 2010
Energy Committee : Energy Committee Approved by the AMS Council in January 2007
First telecon meeting in July
Focus on promoting growth in the economic base of the weather and climate community
Closely interacting with the energy industry to the benefit of all parties.
Identify synergistic opportunities for collaboration and business.
Initial charge is to identify workshops, conferences, and symposia that may be of interest
Organizing energy related meetings and conferences, probably starting with the 2008 AMS Annual Meeting in New Orleans.
Energy Committee : Energy Committee The committee current has 9 of its 12 members. The remaining members will be on-board by January 2007. Members represent a broad range of organizations including renewable energy, trading, electrical, university, oil, and private sector weather providers.
Slide51 : Matthew J. Parker, CCM
Fellow Meteorologist
Atmospheric Technologies Group
Savannah River National Laboratory
Washington Savannah River Company
Bldg. 735-7A
Aiken, SC 29808
(803) 725-2805 FAX (803) 725-4233
email: matt.parker@srnl.doe.gov