Events
FIRST CONFERENCE OF THE INDIAN OCEAN
GLOBAL OCEAN OBSERVING SYSTEM (IOGOOS)
Mauritius, 4-9 November 2002
CONFERENCE STATEMENT
Being constantly aware of their living environment
and its sensitivity to climate change, natural disaster, and
human impact, the Indian Ocean countries have decided to mobilize
their resources to safeguard and manage their oceans and coastal
waters through a permanent ocean observing system, the Indian
Ocean Global Ocean Observing System (IOGOOS).
Nineteen organizations of 10 Indian Ocean countries
signed a Memorandum of Understanding to create and actively
participate in a Regional Alliance for IOGOOS, signed on 5
November 2002 during the First Conference of the Indian Ocean
Global Ocean Observing System, in Mauritius, 4-9 November
2002.
This Memorandum of Understanding is one of the
strongest instruments of cooperation and collaboration in
the context of the oceanographic development of the region.
The Government of Mauritius, through its Mauritius
Oceanography Institute, facilitated this landmark Conference,
with sponsorship from ten international and national agencies
and programs: Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission,
World Meteorological Organization, Department of Ocean Development
of India, US Office of Naval Research, US National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, US National Science Foundation,
Mauritius Oceanography Institute, Climate Variability and
Prediction, Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organization, Land-Ocean Interaction in the Coastal
Zone.
The oceans may be viewed as keeping countries
apart, but GOOS may be viewed as bringing them together. International
conventions, such as the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change and the Convention on Biodiversity, and the economic
challenges and social commitments have mandated the countries
in the GOOS Regional Alliances to implement ocean observing
systems.
IOGOOS is intended to elevate the Indian Ocean
from one of the least studied to one of the most studied of
the world's major oceans, with a real emphasis on the link
between societal and scientific issues.
The 1.5 billion people of the Indian Ocean Rim
can now look forward to an increased ability to make use of
the ocean observations and information produced by GOOS to
improve the management of their marine environment and to
use the ocean's resources sustainably.
IOGOOS will minimize the disconnect between
procedures and requirements in the observation of the Indian
Ocean, and enable the community to derive benefits from baseline
data, routine and timely maps of ocean properties, and useful
forecasts on all relevant time-scales. This will enable the
detection of climate change in the marine environment with
the least possible lag between changes and their detection.
The Conference proposed a number of actions
and programs to give effect to the IOGOOS vision and to meet
its objectives.
The basin-wide structure of temperature, salinity,
and currents will be monitored by combining routine satellite
data with pilot in situ measurements by ARGO floats, moored
buoys, XBTs, and other instruments.
A new data-management structure will disseminate
integrated data products, including ocean analyses and climate
predictions to regional users, not least farmers and fishers.
In the coastal zone, increased and coordinated
study and monitoring of coastal erosion, habitat and biodiversity,
and fisheries will be given priority, with the aim also of
forecasting change and of providing the best possible data
products to the national authorities, managers and scientific
communities.
The significance of the Conference lies in its
explicit statement of commitment of the participating countries,
agencies and institutions, and of interested nongovernmental
organizations, to the generation of oceanic knowledge, data,
and information and their application to the ocean- and climate-change
problems of the Indian Ocean, and to the free and open access
to such knowledge, data, and information, for the benefit
of all the people of the Indian Ocean region and beyond.
Through the Conference, the Intergovernmental
Oceanographic Commission (of UNESCO) and its UN and regional
partners are now one step closer to establishing a fully operational
Global Ocean Observing System in the Indian Ocean with the
collaboration of the countries of the Indian Ocean region.
Dr. K. Radhakrishna (India) was elected Chairman
of IOGOOS and the officers are: Dr Forbes (South Africa),
Mr H. Ganoo (Mauritius), Dr. N. Smith (Australia) and Dr Kasungu
(Kenya).
For the next six years, the Secretariat
will be located in Hyderabad, India.
http://www.incois.gov.in/
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