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Digital Applications

EUMETSAT Council approves next phase of involvement in Destination Earth

Elizabeth BakerBy Elizabeth BakerDecember 7, 20233 Mins Read
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The EUMETSAT Council has given the go-ahead for phase two of the organization’s involvement in the European Union’s groundbreaking Destination Earth initiative.

Destination Earth (DestinE) aims to build virtual replicas of Earth systems, or ‘digital twins’, creating greater insight into weather and climate phenomena and their impacts on society. The initiative is to enable policymakers and decision makers to explore potential scenarios and responses.

The European Commission has entrusted EUMETSAT, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) with the implementation of DestinE. EUMETSAT is responsible for the implementation and operation of the data lake, ESA is responsible for its core service platform and the ECMWF for the two initial digital twins driving the extreme weather and climate adaptation modeling. The data lake is where all of the Destination Earth data can be found and accessed.

Lothar Wolf, head of digital solutions and satellite application facilities at EUMETSAT, said, “EUMETSAT had already successfully deployed the first version of the DestinE data lake during the first phase of the initiative. This first version was developed and implemented to schedule by the industrial consortium, led by CloudFerro together with CS France and EODC Vienna.

“The second phase, which begins in June 2024 and lasts until June 2026, will build on what we have already achieved. We will continue to engage and focus on meeting the users’ needs and bring the data lake services to a 24/7 operations level. EUMETSAT will also work with the ECMWF and ESA in this unique initiative to provide outreach, training and capacity-building activities to foster the user uptake of Destination Earth.”

According to Wolf, other key activities planned for phase two include extending the DestinE data portfolio, maturing the artificial intelligence and machine learning preparedness of its big data processing framework and helping to harmonize and standardize data services and their application processing interfaces, where appropriate. Ensuring seamless access to the data in the data lake while maintaining a high level of scalability is critical to the success of DestinE, Wolf said.

He stated, “In addition to storing and providing access to the massive amounts of data generated by the digital twins and the data generated by user applications, EUMETSAT will federate access to its data, interface with other platforms such as the European Weather Cloud and WEkEO and build partnerships with other EC Green Deal data spaces. Our role in DestinE acknowledges EUMETSAT’s significant experience in data management and data services. That includes providing near-real-time data processing implemented across distributed cloud infrastructures and data holdings.”

For more key digital application updates from the meteorological technology industry, click here.

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