Dear Ocean Science Section AGU Members,
Please see the Dear Colleague Letter below for a very important message.
Best wishes, John W. Farrington,
President of Ocean Sciences Section, AGU.
Dear Colleague:
The National Science and Technology Council's Joint Subcommittee on
Ocean Science and Technology (JSOST) is seeking input and comment from
all interested individuals, institutions, groups, and communities on
updating and focusing the national ocean research priorities
highlighted in Charting the Course for Ocean Science in the United
States for the Next Decade: An Ocean Research Priorities Plan and
Implementation Strategy (Charting the Course).
This national plan, released in January of 2007, is intended to present
ocean research priorities that focus on the most compelling issues in
key areas of interaction between society and the ocean. The goal of
Charting the Course is to formulate priorities for ocean science and
technology initiatives across the wide scope of societal interests and
to define the fundamental principles for guiding actions and programs
in support of the research priorities. This document also provides
guidance on how the various ocean science sectors (government,
academia, industry, and non-governmental entities) can and should be
engaged, individually or through partnerships, to address the areas of
greatest research priority and opportunity.
Charting the Course was developed through a collaborative effort
involving academia, industry, non-governmental organizations, state and
local governments, and anyone with an interest in ocean issues. The
JSOST also developed a series of public and conference information
sessions to provide updates on the development of the national ocean
research priorities.
Charting the Course concisely gathers together and lays out in a single
document the issues and priorities agreed to across our varied
community. It has served the ocean, coasts and Great Lakes well by
immediately raising visibility, and through impacts that may not be
recognized right away. By focusing efforts, it has supported the
creation of programs and projects where there were none, and,
critically, it has guided priorities in federal agency budget
submissions beginning in Fiscal Year 2008 and continuing through the
latest budget submission, Fiscal Year 2010. The JSOST recognizes the
need to harness momentum and magnify this progress.
In the two and a half years since Charting the Course was released,
much has changed in our understanding of the ocean, its processes and
its role in the Earth system as a whole. Much has also changed in our
ability to access, explore, observe, and model the ocean and its
communities. In light of these changes, and based on encouragement and
input from the federal ocean community's external advisory body - the
Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel (ORRAP) - and the White
House Office of Science and Technology Policy, the JSOST is building a
way forward to refresh Charting the Course and revisit the priorities
it sets forth.
The first and most critical step in this way forward is reaching out to
all interested parties for comments on how the current priorities
should be revised for the refreshed Charting the Course. For example,
are there issues that should be listed as priorities under the current
six societal themes? Are there important areas that the original
Charting the Course did not capture? As with developing Charting the
Course, the JSOST considers community input and involvement in updating
the national ocean research priorities a vital component in the
process. JSOST is also working with ORRAP to additionally ensure proper
community input and communication. All input received will be compiled,
cataloged and thoroughly considered by the federal agency writing teams
tasked with crafting a refreshed look at our nation's ocean research
priorities.
How to Comment:
Through this Dear Colleague Letter and a Federal Register Notice
(posted on June 22, 2009), the JSOST is requesting your input in this
community effort to revise, update and focus Charting the Course.
Comments should be sent to comments@jsost.org by July 17, 2009. Please
provide complete contact information (name, affiliation, physical
address, phone, e-mail) and note which of the following Charting the
Course themes your comments address:
Stewardship of our natural and cultural ocean resources
- Increasing resilience to natural hazards
- Enabling marine operations
- The ocean's role in climate
- Improving ecosystem health
- Enhancing human health
- Other
You may also elect to provide comments on the following Charting the Course cross-cutting areas:
- Observations and Infrastructure
- Ocean Education
- Enhancing Basic Understanding
Note that comments (with affiliation) will be made public via the JSOST website.
Thank you in advance for your contribution to enhancing our national
ocean research priorities. Continued progress depends on a community
effort.
Signed/
Tim Killeen
Jerry Miller
Richard Spinrad,
JSOST Co-Chairs