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2025 July ESIP Meeting
We are a home for Earth science data and computing professionals. Our sessions bring together the community for hands-on, interdisciplinary deep dives as we explore "Innovation to Impact" this year. Learn more about ESIP: esipfed.org
Type: Breakout Session clear filter
Tuesday, July 22
 

11:00am PDT

Bridging Ground Measurements and Remote Observations in Ecosystem Monitoring
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
How do we bridge the gap between what we measure on the ground and what we observe from space? This session invites researchers from diverse disciplines to explore the integration of in-situ sensing and satellite observations across various spatial scales—from soil to leaf, across landscapes, and up to the global level.

Our focus centers on sensors and data integration workflows that make scalable, multi-resolution monitoring of ecosystems possible. We’ll explore how these sensor networks support understanding of vegetation dynamics, photosynthesis, carbon processes, touching on nature-based climate solutions though combined in-situ and remote sensing.

Speakers will present case studies and approaches involving:
  • Upscaling from the ground to satellite data
We may also touch on these:
  • SIF (solar-induced fluorescence)
  • SMAP (Soil Moisture Active Passive)
  • Albedo measurements
  • Drone and tower-based sensors
  • Other remote sensing tools
We’ll discuss practical challenges in ground-truthing, calibration, and cross-scale integration of sensor data—along with emerging solutions and standards.

Objectives:
  • Foster a community of practice for information exchange among researchers working on combining ground-based measurements with remote sensing.
  • Share tools, data, and insights that facilitate the integration of in-situ sensors with satellite observations.

Value to Session Participants
The value added from indexing observations across a leaf to globe spectrum will be at the forefront of session discussions. This session will distill the complexity down to leave attendees with an increased familiarity with data served from both sensors and satellites. Additionally, the session will show how these data are analyzed and used in tackling complex environmental monitoring blockers

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No need to prepare beforehand


Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

11:00am PDT

Cloud Technologies as Catalysts for Next-Generation Research Communities
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Speakers
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Federal Partner Engagement on Public Data & Product Changes
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Speakers
avatar for Leslie Hsu

Leslie Hsu

physical scientist, U.S. Geological Survey
Coordinator of the USGS Community for Data Integration and member of the USGS Science Data Management branch.https://github.com/hsu000001
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Repository Crisis Scorecards - An Assessment of Organizational Resiliency to the Unexpected
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
The Repository Crisis Scorecards (RCS) are a set of tools to help a data facility determine their resiliency to unexpected events. We hope participants will bring their filled out scorecards to do some real time analysis of data, talk amongst all participants on how to face shared challenges, and form working groups towards future versions of the scorecards and papers on repository resiliency.

Value to Session Participants: Participants can fill out the scorecard and get a score on their organizational resiliency to crises. They can find other repositories that might be in similar places and start conversations on data sharing agreements, make plans to host other people's data. Participants can participate in developing the next version of the RCS and writing associated papers on it.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Fill out the RCS, access through https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15122045. Please submit results using https://forms.gle/mmEWgCBMMWR3FYKr6All results will be kept private.
Speakers
avatar for Ruth Duerr

Ruth Duerr

Research Scholar, Ronin Institute for Independent Scholars
Practically anything - no sales pitches though
avatar for Rachael Blake

Rachael Blake

Director of Data Science, Intertidal Agency
JC

Jaycee Choi

Predoctoral Associate, The Jackson Laboratory
CB

Carolina Berys-Gonzalez

Data Manager, CCHDO/SIO/UCSD
Tuesday July 22, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Designing data services for people
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
The most effective and high-impact data services and products are designed with the end user in mind. How can you start thinking like a designer from the beginning of a project? Come join us for a quick course in human-centered design and user research. We’ll practice some of the basic methods used by groups like the USDS/18F, IDEO, and Stanford’s d.school. There will be sticky notes and art supplies and How Might We questions. Bring your favorite exercises to share with the group. Leave with a better sense of how you can make sure what you create gets (re)used.

Value to Session Participants
Participants will walk away with some Design 101 skills, along with worksheets and other resources. They will connect with other people interested in human-centered design and contribute their knowledge.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No recommendations provided


Speakers
KW

Kate Wing

Intertidal Agency
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Foundational to Emerging Cloud-Native Technology Part 1
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
As cloud technologies evolve, the Earth science community must balance capacity building for foundational tooling with investing in what’s new. New technologies are often considered risky as they may be unstable and untested, but their potential is too great to ignore.

This two-part session will include presentations in part 1 and a working session in part 2. Part 1 presentations will introduce attendees to both established tools and practices (e.g., Xarray, Dask, Jupyter) and newer methods which have transformative potential (e.g., Jupyter-GIS, Icechunk). The popularization of virtualization via index caching for optimized querying and subsetting will be a primary focus of the emerging technologies section. As archives of cloud data continue to grow, virtualization and smart indexing of this data will become critical to optimizing access in the IO-bound nature of data on the cloud.

Part 2 will include parallel working sessions on foundational technologies and virtualization/indexing methods for participants to gain deeper understanding.

Looking forward, the cloud computing cluster would like to tackle the still current challenge of migrating data to the cloud and making it accessible. During the ESIP summer meeting, we'll collect input from both data providers and users through targeted surveys documenting migration contexts, goals, challenges, solutions and usage pain points. This feedback will inform roundtable discussions and potentially a white paper examining large-scale cloud data accessibility from multiple stakeholder perspectives.

Value to Session Participants
Participants will learn about existing and emerging cloud computing technologies and connect with other practitioners and developers.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for the Session
None provided
Speakers
avatar for Brianna Pagán

Brianna Pagán

Technical Lead, Development Seed
Brianna is first and foremost an environmentalist with a passion for making science accessible and understandable to the masses. She brings over a decade of experience working from local to international environmental efforts, in a broad-range of groups including start-ups, research... Read More →
avatar for Rich Signell

Rich Signell

Consultant, Open Science Computing
Talk to me about enabling horizontally scaling cloud solutions to work with climate or other large earth data effectively using the open source Pangeo community tools (e.g. xarray, Dask, holoviz, kerchunk).
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Principles for the development and curation of semantic resources in Earth science
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
In the past years, the Earth science communities, including ESIP, have seen the come and go of many semantic initiatives and resources. Some of them, although generated impressive impact for a certain period of time, became hard to trace when their financial support ended and the research team dissolved. For this session we aim to have a brainstorm on the challenges and opportunities, and hopefully we can generate a list of principles or even a white paper on the best practices of curating semantic resources for Earth science.

Value to Session Participants
Participants can refresh their knowledge about semantic reproduce curation and share their experience with other scientists. Collaboratively, the session can generate a list of principles or even a white paper that can be shared with the global geoinformatics community.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
We probably will provide a draft document for the audience to collaborate on. Also a few lightning talks will be delivered at the first half of the session.


Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Shared approaches to automating data quality assessment across the repository landscape
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Data fitness-for-purpose is an ongoing and critical issue for researchers and repositories that house Earth science data for discovery, access, and reuse. While much work has been done within disciplines and within specific institutions on how to quantify data quality, there is less consensus on how to standardize and share FAIR data assessments across disciplines. In this session, we will build on the existing momentum of ESIP partners focused on these issues, including work from the Data Readiness, Information Quality, and Data Stewardship clusters. The goal of the session will be to examine interoperability among automated assessment frameworks so that different groups can benefit from each others’ work in building and implementing assessment frameworks. For example, the DataONE MetaDIG framework assesses dataset FAIR checks across the 63 members of the network, and is extending its work into both general and discipline-specific data quality checks. Similarly, programs like NOAA’s GOMO Argo project, NCEI, and other examples like GoFAIR have developed approaches to automated quality assessment that could inform our discussions.

The session will start with 2-3 short introductory talks that introduce current approaches to automated FAIR data assessment, followed by breakout groups to identify areas of potential interoperability in both general and discipline-specific data quality checks.

Potential outputs:

- Brainstorm/Identify discipline-agnostic quality assessment checks
- Brainstorm/Identify discipline-specific data quality libraries / tests to build on
- Comparison of assessment systems and their assessment request and report formats
- Ideas for solving the distributed data problem for data assessment across repository networks
- Recommendations for standardized assessment protocols that enable cross-repository collaboration.      


Value to Session Participants: We expect participants to benefit by 1) learning about existing initiatives in data quality assessment; 2) gaining an increased appreciation of areas of interoperability in automated assessment; and 3) gaining new collaborators to help with shared implementation and operationalization of interoperable data quality frameworks.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Participants can review literature on data quality assessment and approaches to automated data quality assessment, and can spend time thinking about the needs and use cases they might have for automated assessment tooling that interoperates across repositories.
Speakers
avatar for Matt Jones

Matt Jones

Director of Informatics R&D, University of California Santa Barbara
DataONE | Arctic Data Center | Open Science | Provenance and Semantics | Cyberinfrastructure
avatar for Eugene Burger

Eugene Burger

Director of the PMEL Research Services Division, OAR/PMEL
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Team Work Makes the Dream Work: Tales from Enterprise Product Planning and Implementation
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
This session would invite teams to present/discuss their perspectives and lessons learned from building a new products or major features for an enterprise where there are many stakeholders and teams involved. For example, I'm on a team working towards building a new ingest and archive system for NASA Earth. I would talk about our approach to requirements gathering, what has gone well, and what hasn't. It would be a tactful, but honest take on what a team can face with such an endeavor. The desired outcome for the session is to bring folks together over shared experiences, (hopefully) discuss positive outcomes, and provide suggestions for better team work or path to success.

Value to Session Participants: The session could relieve stress for folks who are working on complex problems and provide approaches/techniques for improvement.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: New topic that probably many participants have experienced at some time.
Speakers
avatar for Jess Welch

Jess Welch

Data Scientist | Project Coordinator, ORNL | NASA ESDIS
Tuesday July 22, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

4:00pm PDT

Current and emerging spatial search technology
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Speakers
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Foundational to Emerging Cloud-Native Technology Part 2
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Session Description
As cloud technologies evolve, the Earth science community must balance capacity building for foundational tooling with investing in what’s new. New technologies are often considered risky as they may be unstable and untested, but their potential is too great to ignore.

This two-part session will include presentations in part 1 and a working session in part 2. Part 1 presentations will introduce attendees to both established tools and practices (e.g., Xarray, Dask, Jupyter) and newer methods which have transformative potential (e.g., Jupyter-GIS, Icechunk). The popularization of virtualization via index caching for optimized querying and subsetting will be a primary focus of the emerging technologies section. As archives of cloud data continue to grow, virtualization and smart indexing of this data will become critical to optimizing access in the IO-bound nature of data on the cloud.

Part 2 will include parallel working sessions on foundational technologies and virtualization/indexing methods for participants to gain deeper understanding.

Looking forward, the cloud computing cluster would like to tackle the still current challenge of migrating data to the cloud and making it accessible. During the ESIP summer meeting, we'll collect input from both data providers and users through targeted surveys documenting migration contexts, goals, challenges, solutions and usage pain points. This feedback will inform roundtable discussions and potentially a white paper examining large-scale cloud data accessibility from multiple stakeholder perspectives.

Value to Session Participants
Participants will learn about existing and emerging cloud computing technologies and connect with other practitioners and developers.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for the Session
None provided
Speakers
avatar for Brianna Pagán

Brianna Pagán

Technical Lead, Development Seed
Brianna is first and foremost an environmentalist with a passion for making science accessible and understandable to the masses. She brings over a decade of experience working from local to international environmental efforts, in a broad-range of groups including start-ups, research... Read More →
avatar for Rich Signell

Rich Signell

Consultant, Open Science Computing
Talk to me about enabling horizontally scaling cloud solutions to work with climate or other large earth data effectively using the open source Pangeo community tools (e.g. xarray, Dask, holoviz, kerchunk).
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Making AI Actionable: Transforming Earth Science through Generative AI, Street View Imagery, and Machine Learning
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
This session highlights cutting-edge applications of AI and ML designed to deliver actionable insights and practical solutions in Earth Science. Speakers will present diverse approaches, including the development of a generative AI-driven dashboard that provides real-time flooding analysis in Central Appalachia, employing GeoAI to assess environmental perceptions using street view imagery, and synthesizing recent advancements from the ESIP Machine Learning Cluster's research initiatives. Attendees will gain a deeper understanding of how advanced AI methodologies can be effectively implemented to address complex environmental challenges, support decision-making processes, and improve community resilience.

Value to Session Participants: Explore actionable innovations, strengthening cross-cluster collaboration, enhance emergency response capabilities.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: None.
Speakers
avatar for Ziheng Sun

Ziheng Sun

Research Associate Prof, George Mason University
My research interests are mainly on geospatial cyberinfrastructure and machine learning in atmospheric and agricultural sciences.
Tuesday July 22, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA
 
Wednesday, July 23
 

8:30am PDT

Advancing Earth Science with Artificial Intelligence: Transforming Data into Action
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
Speakers
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
TBA

8:30am PDT

Case Studies of Transitioning Datasets from Specialist to Generalist Repositories
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
Speakers
avatar for Ruth Duerr

Ruth Duerr

Research Scholar, Ronin Institute for Independent Scholars
Practically anything - no sales pitches though
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
TBA

8:30am PDT

Earth Data Connections: Interoperable Geospatial Tools and New Technologies with a Community-Driven Approach
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
Session Description
Fostering an open-science geospatial community requires platforms for sharing new technologies, workflows, and interoperable tools. This session provides a space for geospatial scientists at all experience levels to explore these innovations, sparking collaboration and creativity. Developers will present their community-driven tools, with accessible demonstrations that offer immediate resources for attendees to engage with and inspire future collaboration. Session organizers and speakers will use pre-managed environments, such as Google Colab, to share any live coding examples, web tools, or other resources to help connect attendees with tools and data.

Value to Session Participants
Participants will gain proficiency in the latest Earth science technologies and workflows, interact directly with developers, explore practical examples of tools in use, and take away working code to enhance their workflows.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
For users interested in coding or data examples who may be new to such methods, we recommend the following free Carpentries workshops: Plotting and Programming in Python, and Programming with R. For all attendees, we recommend reviewing the Cloud-Optimized Geospatial Formats Guide to brush up on new and existing data formats, and how they are implemented in the cloud for geospatial science usage.


Speakers
KG

Keenan Ganz

PhD Student, University of Washington
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
TBA

8:30am PDT

Measuring Impact: Success Metrics for Open Data
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
Sharing data in the cloud lets data users spend more time on data analysis rather than data acquisition. Just putting data into the cloud isn’t enough. In this session, the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Open Data team will discuss how to gather basic metrics for datasets in the Open Data program, and how to leverage them to show the value of these data to the community.

Measuring the impact of open data initiatives is essential for demonstrating their value to science and innovation. This session brings together data providers and cloud technology experts to explore effective approaches for measuring open data success. Leading data providers will share best practices and lessons learned from implementing metrics programs, while the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Open Data team will demonstrate practical methods for collecting and analyzing dataset usage in the cloud. Participants will learn how to effectively measure and communicate the value of their open data programs to stakeholders and the broader scientific community.


Value to Session Participants: Learn how to measure usage of your open dataset and explain it's value.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Should not be needed
Speakers
avatar for Chris Stoner

Chris Stoner

AWS Open Environmental and Geospatial Data Lead, Amazon Web Services (AWS)
avatar for Matt Putkoski

Matt Putkoski

Senior Mgr, Amazon Sustainability Data Initiative, Amazon/AWS
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
TBA

8:30am PDT

Visions for the future of Wildfire Data Science
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
Speakers
avatar for Dave Jones

Dave Jones

CEO, StormCenter Communications
GeoCollaborate, is an SBIR Phase III technology (Yes, its a big deal) that enables real-time data access through web services, sharing and collaboration across multiple platforms. We call GeoCollaborate a 'Collaborative Common Operating Picture' that empowers decision making, situational... Read More →
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30am - 10:00am PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Archive your first or second data set
Wednesday July 23, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
This is a hands-on companion session to “Case Studies of Transitioning Datasets from Specialist to Generalist Repositories”.

The vision here will be to help people figure out where and how to archive their first or second data set. For example, at NOAA Fisheries there is a list of approved data repositories that staff are encouraged to use (that we will share as we organize this session). But how? This will be a workshop-type session, BYOD: “Bring your own dataset”! We will pick 1-3 repositories to intro/demo in the first part, including discussion about metadata. Then, participants will work through where and how to archive their data, with support from helpers with repository and metadata expertise.

There are many questions that go along with archiving a dataset: which repository should I choose? What is metadata, and which metadata are required? What are PIDs, and why do people keep asking me for them? This hands-on workshop session invites you to BYOD: “Bring your own dataset”, and the presenters will demo the best practices of depositing data into different repositories. We will discuss metadata and other questions, and finally participants will deposit their dataset into a repository with support from helpers and presenters with repository and metadata expertise.

Value to Session Participants
People who BYOD will have a sense of where and how to archive at the least, and hopefully will have their data archived at the end of the session. Others who came to learn are also welcome, and will have an increased understanding of the possibilities and process for data archiving.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
Bring a data set you'd like to archive. Maybe on a hard drive, or a link! If you have physical data you could bring that too and we can talk through what could be involved to digitize.
Speakers
JL

Julia Lowndes

Director, Openscapes
Dr. Julia Stewart Lowndes is Openscapes founding director and co-leads NASA Openscapes and NOAA Fisheries Openscapes projects. I am a marine ecologist working at the intersection of actionable science, data science, and open science. My main focus is mentoring teams to develop technical... Read More →
avatar for Rachael Blake

Rachael Blake

Director of Data Science, Intertidal Agency
KW

Kate Wing

Intertidal Agency
Wednesday July 23, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

11:00am PDT

Council of Data Facilities: AI-readiness, Funding and Support, and CDF’s Future
Wednesday July 23, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
The Council of Data Facilities serves as a community focus for data repositories to share knowledge, work on topics of common concern, and speak with a united voice to external communities. This session, open to all, will cover three topics:

1) AI-readiness and data facilities: status, needs, and opportunities. As AI is broadly revolutionizing how science and research are done, it is also bringing new expectations for data repositories to supply AI-ready data. As data facilities, what are the challenges this poses, what are the resources that are available, what are the gaps, and what do we need to move forward? An effort to develop a community roadmap article on data facility AI-readiness will be presented, and members will be invited to give feedback and participate in an open discussion of common challenges, interests and collaborative opportunities.

2) Data facilities in a chaotic environment. Given the unprecedented shifts in funding and agency priorities around data curation, how do we as a community organize to support each other and advocate for the critical work we do? This section will discuss the human side of communication and support, and will coordinate with the separate sessions on data replication across repositories and the repository crisis scorecard.

3) Future Goals and Directions. As data facility needs and interests evolve, and as stressors add demands on our limited time, how can the CDF best organize to serve its community, and to communicate to critical external communities. This will include a brief overview of its original mission and role, and a community “open mike” time for your thoughts on what the CDF can do for you.

Value to Session Participants
The goal is to support data facilities with two current topics of high interest- AI-readiness and navigating the current chaos - as well as get input to better position the CDF work to serve the community going forward (the CDF has lost some momentum lately.)

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
Gather your ideas and issues on how your repository is prepared and preparing for AI readiness and greater funding uncertainty. Have you have been part of the CDF in the past? Why did you participate and is there something that you would like the CDF to focus on going forward?
Speakers
avatar for Karen Stocks

Karen Stocks

Director, Geological Data Center, University of California San Diego
Wednesday July 23, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Earth Science data stewardship in the cloud
Wednesday July 23, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
US agencies involved in the stewardship and management of earth science data have been migrating that data to the cloud for many years. With that experience has come a reevaluation of the risks and mitigations associated with preserving and protecting those archives. Cloud-based stewardship presents common, evolving and completely new risks when compared to an on-premises archive. But the cloud also provides new mitigations to the traditional risks associated with data stewardship.

Additionally, the sheer scale of our archives present new problems to long-term archival. As stewards of this data it is the various agencies' responsibility to maintain and protect those archives now and into the future. How will the cloud help us in this regard?

We invite agencies, organizations and individuals to present their experiences with cloud archive stewardship and their plans for the future so that we can learn and provide better solutions to our community.


Agenda
  • NASA's Archive Guidelines for the cloud Presenter: Doug Newman
  • Taming the fire - responding to unpredictability that comes with being in the cloud Presenter: Ben Williams

Value to Session Participants: We want to share our agency's experience with cloud data stewardship so that other's can learn from us.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: None.
Speakers
avatar for Doug Newman

Doug Newman

Systems Engineer, NASA/ESDIS
NASA ESDIS Systems Engineer.
Wednesday July 23, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Creating a DMP resource for the ESIP community
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
The Data Stewardship Committee and the Marine Data Cluster created a DMP-focused working group after the January ESIP virtual meeting to explore and prototype a DMP resource for the ESIP community. This session will review the plan and progress of that working group effort, but the majority of the session will be devoted to exploring, providing feedback, and helping refine the ESIP Community DMP resource on GitHub.  

Value to Session Participants: Help us make this resource more effective and efficient, and something ideally you would want to come back and use for your next proposal DMP writing session.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: We will provide a link to the GitHub repository in the session portal, for participants to review prior to the session.  We will also provide a quick “how to guide” for anyone new to GitHub to work through prior to attending, so they can become familiar with the contributing process that will be used during the session.  
Speakers
avatar for Elisha Wood-Charlson

Elisha Wood-Charlson

KBase User Engagement Lead, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
avatar for Rachael Blake

Rachael Blake

Director of Data Science, Intertidal Agency
CB

Carolina Berys-Gonzalez

Data Manager, CCHDO/SIO/UCSD
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

ESDIS Standards Coordination Office - Newly Adopted Standard
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
ESCO will review newly adopted standards, with a particular focus on data processing levels and variable-level metadata.

Value to Session Participants: Participants will learn about the new standards, how to use them effectively to improve access to data.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: None.
Speakers
avatar for Beth Huffer

Beth Huffer

Information Systems Engineer, Lingua Logica LLC/NASA Atmospheric Science Data Center
SO

Steve Olding

ESCO Team Lead, NASA ESCO
avatar for Ed Armstrong

Ed Armstrong

Science Systems Engineer, NASA JPL/PO.DAAC
NP

Nathan Pollock

Senior Software Developer
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

More Support with Less Effort
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
In an era of decreasing budgets, data repositories must do more with less.  Repositories seek new approaches to provide the same or greater level of service (LOS) for their data holdings while using resources more efficiently (a same or smaller level of effort, LOE).  We will discuss needs and percolate ideas centered on the application of practical, robust, and concise communication methods to socialize updated requirements, guidance, or other process-oriented information to key stakeholders throughout the data lifecycle.  

While the concept of improved communication and socialization spans many areas, the session will focus on the example of conveying updated data product production guidance to data producers. Various formal requirements and informal guidance documents exist across NASA and other repositories for precisely this purpose. However, lengthy descriptions and technical jargon often make it impractical for data producers to peruse such documents, and it is not uncommon for misunderstandings to cause data publication delays.

In this interactive session, a science communication specialist will give an overview of several tools and techniques for conveying technical-oriented requirements in a digestible, practicable manner. We will then explore highlights of a current guidance document, as an example, and facilitate a small group activity in which participants will brainstorm the best ways to socialize the guidance using a variety of techniques. Overall, the session will equip participants with skills and new ideas to improve stakeholders’ practical understanding and implementation of requirements, with a renewed focus on internal process consistency, where possible. As data stewardship professionals, we must evolve to support a higher LOS with a refined LOE.

Value to Session Participants
Gain skills on multiple ways to practically and effectively distill key information (eg: requirements documentation) to a message and delivery method(s) prone to increased stakeholder buy-in and adherence.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
Reviewing the recent NASA ESDS DPDG would be helpful, but not required


Speakers
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

What role should civil society play in climate and environmental data stewardship?
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
The American climate and environmental data landscape is changing rapidly. The responsibility for data collection, processing, maintenance, and dissemination may need to shift substantially onto civil society.  This session is an interactive workshop that explores the question: What role could and should civil society play in American climate and environmental data over the coming decade?

This session will include brief presentation about civil society data stewardship, but the majority of the session will focus on breakout group discussions about the opportunities, needs, challenges, and limitations of civil society performing key data stewardship functions (collection, processing, maintenance, dissemination, and others) across several different types of data: atmospheric and marine climate data, conservation data, toxic chemicals release and exposure data, and regulatory compliance data. We will come together at the close of the session to share about the possibilities and pitfalls we see in civil society taking on new roles in different kinds of data stewardship.

Value to Session Participants
The future of federal data is a significant concern, and many people are asking if non-governmental entities can step in to provide data that researchers, policymakers, and society at large rely on. This session is an opportunity for participants to share thoughts, learn from colleagues, and dive deeply into considering what civil society can–and can’t–take on in the coming years. Participants will come away with a sense of what is possible and what is feasible for civil society in different fields.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
The best way to prepare is to think about and perhaps do some background research about what kinds of equipment are necessary for data collection, what expertise is needed for processing, which entities are currently responsible for data collection, processing, storing, and disseminating.

Speakers
GM

Gregory Maurer

Data Scientist/Data Manager, New Mexico State University
An ecologist and the information manager for the Jornada Basin LTER, with research interests in global change, drylands, and data science.
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Working towards AI-readiness Checklist 2.0
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
Session Description
The Data Readiness Cluster is working towards the next version of the ESIP AI-readiness checklist to help both data producers and data users to assess the usability of open environmental data for AI applications. The cluster identified three major areas for improved based on pilot programs with World Data System, UK Met Office, and other community members' feedback. This working session will focus on collaboration towards the next version of the AI-readiness checklist. The three topics that will be included in the working session include:
  1. Develop primers to help users to understand the questions being asked in the checklist and how to answer these questions.
  2. Integrate the feedback from early adopters to improve the checklist by clarifying questions and adding additional information to support data integration.
  3. Develop a collection of assessment results from early-adopters.

Value to Session Participants
This will allow the session participants contributing to the new version of the AI-readiness checklist.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No recommendations provided


Speakers
avatar for Douglas Rao

Douglas Rao

Research Scientist, CISESS-NC/NOAA NCEI
I am currently a Research Scientist at North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies, affiliated with NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. My current research at NCICS focuses on generating a blended near-surface air temperature dataset by integrating in situ measurements... Read More →
Wednesday July 23, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Bringing Earth Science Data to Life with Open-Source Storytelling
Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Speakers
avatar for Brianna Pagán

Brianna Pagán

Technical Lead, Development Seed
Brianna is first and foremost an environmentalist with a passion for making science accessible and understandable to the masses. She brings over a decade of experience working from local to international environmental efforts, in a broad-range of groups including start-ups, research... Read More →
Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Community-derived validation suites for schema.org Dataset interoperability
Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Schema.org metadata has become an important, interoperable thread linking repositories across the Earth sciences. The Science-on-schema.org (SOSO) guidelines provide ESIP-wide recommendations for how data providers should structure and provide Dataset metadata in unambiguous and consistent ways with schema.org. Nevertheless, the community would benefit from improved tooling and a shared understanding of what it means to be compliant with SOSO guidelines, and which fields are required and optional for various downstream metadata use cases. Towards that end, this will be a working session of the SOSO cluster focused on community agreement on validation rules and approaches for Science-on-Schema.org Dataset records. We are looking for useful use cases and applications from data aggregators (e.g., DataONE, Google, Ocean Info Hub), as well as from data facilities like repositories, and other researcher-driven validation needs. The session will focus on the following activities:

1. Quick overview of use cases for SOSO validation requirements, and how they might vary across different use cases and applications
2. Brainstorm, review, and revise a set of proposed validation rules for different SOSO use cases
3. Discuss and decide which validation rules are required and recommended for each of several use cases (possibly in breakout groups if the group is large)
4. Discussion of next steps to formalize and release as a product


Value to Session Participants: Participants will benefit by being able to contribute to and learn from community perspectives on metadata use cases, validation needs, and validation approaches. Ultimately, we expect the community input from this session will lead to improved tooling that participants can use in their own data facilities for improving metadata and data delivery services.


Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session:
- Review the SOSO Dataset Guidelines
- Think about your use cases for metadata validation
- Bring example JSON-LD docs from your community if desired to see how they meet various use cases
- If desired, familiarize yourself with SHACL as a validation language
Speakers
avatar for Matt Jones

Matt Jones

Director of Informatics R&D, University of California Santa Barbara
DataONE | Arctic Data Center | Open Science | Provenance and Semantics | Cyberinfrastructure
avatar for Chantelle Verhey

Chantelle Verhey

Research Associate, International Technology Office & Ocean Networks Canada
Chantelle Verhey is a Research Associate for the World Data System-International Technology Office hosted at Ocean Networks Canada. She has a Masters of Science in Environmental Management from the University of Reading in the UK, and was dedicated to researching Forest fire trends... Read More →
avatar for Rebecca Ringuette

Rebecca Ringuette

Principal Open Science Scientist, Heliophysics Digital Resource Library at NASA Goddard
Heliophysics infrastructure (e.g. archives, data access/utilization), making resources (archives, software, notebooks, etc) more discoverable and open, more level citation (software and models in addition to data), how to make science reproducible and interactive, and current efforts... Read More →
avatar for Adam Shepherd

Adam Shepherd

Technical Director @ BCO-DMO, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Architecting adaptive and sustainable data infrastructures.Co-chair of the ESIP schema.org clusterKnowledge Graphs | Data Containerization | Declarative Workflows | Provenance | schema.org
Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

HDF5 2.0: Cloud Optimized from the Start
Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Session Description
HDF5 has quietly enabled breakthroughs across geosciences for over two decades. From NASA satellite missions to climate and weather modeling (as netCDF-4 backend) it has helped scientists to manage, share, and make sense of complex data seamlessly across various computing platforms. This session will present enhancements slated for the upcoming release 2.0 of the HDF5 library: new datatypes for ML/AI applications and complex numbers, new default settings when accessing cloud optimized HDF5 files, and easier use of advanced compression methods. The topics covered will also include latest features and improvements for accessing: (1) NASA's EOSDIS HDF5/netCDF-4, HDF-EOS5, and HDF4 data via OPeNDAP DMR++ web service in the AWS cloud; (2) cloud native HDF5/JSON-based format (HSDS) using Python.

Value to Session Participants
ESIP community typically does not provide feedback to HDF software developers outside of ESIP meetings, probably because for many it is buried into their software stacks. However, many of the performance bottlenecks or workflow obstacles come from the data access software. Sessions like this one help educate broader ESIP community and also provide them with an opportunity to report their data access issues without having to provide comprehensive technical details.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No recommendations provided


Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Improving Data Impact through Governance and Stewardship Activities
Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
This session will explore how connecting data governance and stewardship efforts across organizations can enhance data interoperability and maximize impact. Participants will discuss data governance efforts around PIDs, file formats, metadata, vocabularies, semantics – all critical artifacts that support data interoperability.  

We propose a workshop style session to discuss ways to improve data impact through data governance and stewardship. Specifically, we will discuss questions such as: What does it take to connect data across organizations, disciplines, and applications? What types of efforts should be prioritized when resources are limited? How can data governance facilitate this process?


Value to Session Participants: Bring people together from diverse organizations, disciplines, and applications to explore how collaboration in data governance can enhance interoperability and maximize data impact.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: None at this time
Speakers
avatar for Sara Lubkin

Sara Lubkin

DAAC Engineer, NASA/ESDIS
avatar for Ge Peng

Ge Peng

Chief Research Scientist, SSAI/NASA ESDIS
avatar for Douglas Rao

Douglas Rao

Research Scientist, CISESS-NC/NOAA NCEI
I am currently a Research Scientist at North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies, affiliated with NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. My current research at NCICS focuses on generating a blended near-surface air temperature dataset by integrating in situ measurements... Read More →
NR

Nancy Ritchey

NCEI Archive Branch Chief, NOAA/NESDIS
Wednesday July 23, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA
 
Thursday, July 24
 

11:00am PDT

Consistent, reproducible workflows for geospatial stewardship
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
This session aims to create consistent, reproducible workflows for others to learn and use. We will start with a concrete example using source.coop, a data publishing utility that works like GitHub in that data has an “owner”, is versioned, and there is metadata and documentation associated. This is new technology, and we are interested to explore it together and create onboarding documentation for the following questions:
How do you get data onto source.coop?
What technical and metadata expertise do you need?
Could it point to a STAC catalogue?

We will have live demos from two of the most seasoned users with source.coop (Signell and Boettiger) and work together to co-create documentation and identify any opportunities for feature development to make it easier to onboard. We will design the session so there is time to poke around live together and that participants are comfortable asking questions and saying “wait, can you say more, what does that do?” We’ll use Google Docs and Markdown/GitHub for documentation, so that there are multiple entry points for participants to contribute

Value to Session Participants
Others are interested in what this technology can do, and also will have ideas about what modern reusable geospatial workflows can look like. Excited to learn from them.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No recommendations provided


Speakers
JL

Julia Lowndes

Director, Openscapes
Dr. Julia Stewart Lowndes is Openscapes founding director and co-leads NASA Openscapes and NOAA Fisheries Openscapes projects. I am a marine ecologist working at the intersection of actionable science, data science, and open science. My main focus is mentoring teams to develop technical... Read More →
avatar for Rich Signell

Rich Signell

Consultant, Open Science Computing
Talk to me about enabling horizontally scaling cloud solutions to work with climate or other large earth data effectively using the open source Pangeo community tools (e.g. xarray, Dask, holoviz, kerchunk).
avatar for Brianna Pagán

Brianna Pagán

Technical Lead, Development Seed
Brianna is first and foremost an environmentalist with a passion for making science accessible and understandable to the masses. She brings over a decade of experience working from local to international environmental efforts, in a broad-range of groups including start-ups, research... Read More →
avatar for Jed Sundwall

Jed Sundwall

Executive Director, Radiant Earth
Jed has spent his career working at the intersection of data, product development, cloud computing, economics, and policy. He has helped create data sharing best practices that have been adopted worldwide by NASA, USGS, Google, Microsoft and other institutions around the world. He... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Data replication and repository succession: sustaining and preserving data for the long-term
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
Individual specialized and general data repositories provide the backbone for Earth science data discovery, access, and preservation, and we’re even stronger working together as a network of repositories. While individual repositories are essential for delivering critical services, they remain vulnerable to risks that endanger long-term delivery of these services and the collections upon which they are based to the broader user community These risks include natural and human-made disasters, technology failures, geopolitical dynamics, and changes in funding provided to enable those services. Many of these risks can be mitigated through repository design and management (e.g. effective backups, systematic technology development and testing, geographic distribution of critical storage and service infrastructure), but some risks are to the repositories themselves as functioning organizations, for example,  due to funding failures and changes in priorities by funding agencies. The cessation of operations of individual repositories places their data collections at risk in the absence of time or resources to execute the steps necessary to transfer data collections and associated metadata to successor organizations to ensure continued preservation, discovery, and access. While data might be moved from one repository to another, the services repositories operate for analytics, visualization, and management are often much more difficult and expensive to re-home. This session will bring together a panel of repository representatives to discuss data replication and succession planning strategies as an introduction to a facilitated discussion amongst the session attendees around how the ESIP community can participate in and contribute to the long-term preservation of Earth science data and related services beyond the boundaries of the individual repositories that currently provide them.
This is a panel and participant discussion companion session to “Research Data Management Systems (RDMS): A hands-on session on how to replicate data across similar systems”. If accepted we request that this session be scheduled before the related hands-on session.

Value to Session Participants
The participants will contribute to and benefit from the development of new and stronger relationships between data repositories, increased knowledge of data collection sustainability strategies, and ultimately, a more resilient Earth data preservation and access ecosystem.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
Participants could best prepare for the session by giving some thought to how we can extend our long-standing focus on repository sustainability to an expanded concept of long-term continuity of access to data and metadata collections, and services as appropriate.


Speakers
avatar for Karl Benedict

Karl Benedict

Emeritus Professor, University of New Mexico
Since 1986 I have had parallel careers in Information Technology, Data Management and Analysis, and Archaeology. Since 1993 when I arrived at UNM I have worked as a Graduate Student in Anthropology, Research Scientist, Research Faculty, Applied Research Center Director, and currently... Read More →
CB

Carolina Berys-Gonzalez

Data Manager, CCHDO/SIO/UCSD
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Interoperable and discipline-neutral community metadata standards for cloud-optimized data access
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Session Description
Access-optimized metadata—exemplified by formats such as DMR++ and Kerchunk—presents a powerful strategy for improving data access, analysis workflows, and software performance. These metadata structures describe how data is organized within a file or object, enabling tools to efficiently retrieve only the required subsets of data, regardless of whether they reside on local disks or in cloud object stores like S3.

Recent developments and performance benchmarks demonstrate that software capable of interpreting access-optimized metadata (e.g., VirtualiZarr) can significantly reduce data access time of data stored in legacy formats without requiring the costly and time-consuming reformatting of entire archives. This creates new opportunities to modernize data access patterns while maintaining compatibility with older data formats.

Despite this promise, the community lacks a shared understanding or specification—formal or informal—of what constitutes access-optimized metadata. This absence of coordination has limited interoperability and awareness across projects and tools.

During this session we will aim to:
  1. Demonstrate high-performance access to data in legacy formats stored on S3, enabled by DMR++ metadata.
  2. Examine the structural and semantic characteristics that make DMR++ and Kerchunk effective.
  3. Explore how these metadata models might converge into a unified and extensible framework for access-optimized metadata.

The goal is to initiate a community-wide discussion about formalizing and standardizing this emerging class of metadata. The intent is to enable interoperable, independent implementations of software that uses Access-optimized metadata and foster broader adoption across scientific computing environments.

Value to Session Participants
Participants in this session will gain awareness of, and provide feedback on, access-optimized metadata practices, such as chunking and data compression practices. Feedback about best practices remains lacking, as does community awareness of what access-optimized metadata information is, how to create it, and overall scientific workflows that make use of access-optimized metadata. Finally, we hope that participants will be able to differentiate between domain-based community standards such as Climate-Forecast and domain-neutral access-optimized metadata.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No recommendations provided


Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Machine learning and the art of data discovery
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Description
With the advent and popularity of ChatGPT and other chatbot technologies, we see an opportunity to improve the quality of search and discovery within earth science data archives. Multiple machine learning technologies could be brought to bear on the problem of producing high quality results from earth science queries. Those technologies include, but are not limited to:
Chatbots
Knowledge Graphs
Large language models
Vector embeddings

These technologies could be applied to both the search of earth science archives, where the user has an idea of what they are searching for, and the discovery of data, where the user may discover new knowledge from existing data.

We invite agencies, organizations and individuals to present their experiences with the above technologies applied to earth science search and discovery and what they plan to do in the future so that we can learn and provide better solutions to our community.


Agenda
  • Talk: Use of natural language to discovery science data Presenter: Ryan Abbott
  • Talk: Measuring and adjusting the quality of responses to AI searches Presenter: Deep Mistry
  • Talk: UX considerations for mixing AI and user interfaces Presenter: Trevor Lang
  • Talk: Impact the quality of underlying data has on our ability to discover it Presenter: Ryan Abbott
  • Talk: Discovering signal in the noise - making sense of the torrent of metrics and data Presenters: Jonathan Blake and Han Mai


Value to Session Participants: NASA ESDIS are about to make it easier to find your data. Hopefully.  

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Engineer your prompts!
Speakers
avatar for Doug Newman

Doug Newman

Systems Engineer, NASA/ESDIS
NASA ESDIS Systems Engineer.
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

The Changing Landscape of Disasters: How will we access trusted data services and support decision makers with the rapidly changing environment?
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
There are so many changes occurring in the disaster preparedness, response and recovery sector that our heads are spinning. Hurricane season, wildfires, and flooding are upon us and communities, and the private sector want to be prepared and has a great need and desire for trusted data to drive effective decisions. This session will provide a space for conversation and even venting as we talk about efforts to use data and innovation to make positive impacts on society given the volatile nature of these rapid changes. We will invite speakers from the response community to help us understand ongoing data collection activities and how they plan to support their users. We will also explore how ESIP can support their goals.

Value to Session Participants: Participants should take away a heightened level of awareness regarding the amount of available data that may or may not be used for the benefit of communities. We hope that participants will engage and provide their thoughts, data sources and contacts that we can collect and test with communities in the future. There is so much good being done by many and we want to engage participants in a thoughtful discussion about the availability of useful data. While the federal government struggles with challenges, other sectors are making progress and we want to engage with them.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Watch the news or trusted social media posts about agencies that use data, Watch the ESIP YouTube channel and presentations from the clusters especially wildfires and disaster lifecycle.
Speakers
avatar for Dave Jones

Dave Jones

CEO, StormCenter Communications
GeoCollaborate, is an SBIR Phase III technology (Yes, its a big deal) that enables real-time data access through web services, sharing and collaboration across multiple platforms. We call GeoCollaborate a 'Collaborative Common Operating Picture' that empowers decision making, situational... Read More →
avatar for Maggi Glasscoe

Maggi Glasscoe

Researcher, University of Alabama in Huntsville
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Unconference
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
At ESIP we know that the world of Earth Science Data changes daily and the issues, opportunities and challenges are constantly evolving. We want our meetings to meet that demand. The Unconference is a time to propose an important topic that hasn't been covered elsewhere this week, or a new opportunity that has emerged in discussions. How to participate in the Unconference: You can write your topic on sticky notes at the Reception Desk throughout the week to attract interest. Submit your ideas by the start of lunch (12:30 PM) on Thursday. Pitch: After lunch give a short, one-minute pitch for your session. Gather: Each topic will get a location and participants can join the discussions of greatest interest to them or move between conversations.
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:00pm - 3:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Natural Language Meets Natural Systems: Designing Usable AI Interfaces for Climate Data
Thursday July 24, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Speakers
Thursday July 24, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Research Data Management Systems (RDMS): A hands-on session on how to replicate data across similar systems
Thursday July 24, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Research data management systems (RDMS) are software systems like any other, and are subject to the same best practices as other software, including backup/replication and test your backups regularly. For RDMS the core goal is to preserve all datasets, all metadata and data, any backups should preserve this in a fashion that can be ingested by the same RDMS that created the backup or an instance of the RDMS somewhere else.
 
As the saying goes, you are only as good as your last tested backup. Testing the ability of other repositories to ingest your data backups is an exercise to perform repeatedly. In this hands-on session we will present some examples of how to backup/replicate common open source RDMS, such as ERDDAP and Metacat. We may explore thoughts around automated ingest testing capabilities to allow for data facilities to test their backups on a small scale without disrupting regular activities at multiple data facilities.
This is a hands-on companion session to “Data replication and repository succession: sustaining and preserving data for the long-term”.


Value to Session Participants: Hands-on experience with doing replication with their RDMS.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: For those running open source RDMS, familiarity with the backup and ingest functions of their RDMS. For those running home grown/proprietary RDMS, same as above and additional focus on documentation for others to reference in case of a database dump.
Speakers
avatar for Matt Jones

Matt Jones

Director of Informatics R&D, University of California Santa Barbara
DataONE | Arctic Data Center | Open Science | Provenance and Semantics | Cyberinfrastructure
CB

Carolina Berys-Gonzalez

Data Manager, CCHDO/SIO/UCSD
avatar for Karl Benedict

Karl Benedict

Emeritus Professor, University of New Mexico
Since 1986 I have had parallel careers in Information Technology, Data Management and Analysis, and Archaeology. Since 1993 when I arrived at UNM I have worked as a Graduate Student in Anthropology, Research Scientist, Research Faculty, Applied Research Center Director, and currently... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

Supporting Earth Scientists and Science in a Time of Disruption
Thursday July 24, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
Speakers
avatar for Douglas Rao

Douglas Rao

Research Scientist, CISESS-NC/NOAA NCEI
I am currently a Research Scientist at North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies, affiliated with NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. My current research at NCICS focuses on generating a blended near-surface air temperature dataset by integrating in situ measurements... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 4:00pm - 5:30pm PDT
TBA

4:00pm PDT

4:00pm PDT

 
Friday, July 25
 

9:00am PDT

Advancing Earth System Science by innovating distributed streaming data access and data-proximate computation
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
The Open Science Data Federation (OSDF, https://osg-htc.org/services/osdf) is an NSF-funded infrastructure which connects disparate datasets into a single, nation-wide data distribution network that can democratize and deliver data to a wide range of computational environments. This session is aimed at two different groups of participants - 1) Open Data providers who might be interested in learning how to leverage the capabilities of OSDF to provide distributed access to their geoscience datasets and 2) Researchers who are interested in using these datasets. Through lightning talks, demonstrations, and open discussion, we will showcase OSDF-enabled workflows, provide practical guidance on how to contribute to or leverage the OSDF ecosystem, and run a short demonstration of using NCAR’s data through the NSF’s OSPool (https://osg-htc.org/ospool) resource.

Value to Session Participants: Open data providers will learn how OSDF can help increase the visibility and impact of their datasets while minimizing redundant data transfers and cloud ingress/egress costs. Scientists will gain insights into accessing curated datasets more efficiently, with delivery optimized for their preferred computational platforms. Both groups will benefit from shared workflows, best practices, and opportunities to shape future infrastructure development.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: None.
Speakers
avatar for Harsha Hampapura

Harsha Hampapura

Associate Scientist II, NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
DS

Douglas Schuster

Acting Director, Information Systems Division, National Center for Atmospheric Research
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
TBA

9:00am PDT

Crossing the chasm: amplifying success stories about co-creating across institutions
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
Session Description
At the May 2025 Cloud Native Geospatial Conference Lowndes gave a keynote titled “Crossing the chasm: change & resilience within organizations. Diffusion of Innovation theory in practice with NOAA Fisheries Openscapes”. It was about the awesome staff at NOAA Fisheries who are responsible for the stewardship of the nation’s ocean resources and their habitat.

Claiming we’ve crossed a big scary chasm is a bold claim, especially for a big goal: data modernization and workforce development across the agency. And, while the work is still hard and ongoing, this crossing is a story to celebrate. To amplify. To point and say “this is possible”. To repeat/fork in new places. To join. To grow. For you, us, to do these things. This is work that has been building for decades, by many dedicated people inside and outside of NOAA Fisheries, with many different job titles and contributions. This chasm crossing is a big deal because new data workflows are more efficient and robust, but they take real time to adopt and take new skills. It is not easy in a large organization. But through steady work over the last three years, it’s happening.
We are out of the early adopter phase and into the early majority. We shared how we planned, using the Diffusion of Innovation theory by EM Rogers (1962). And then how we operationalized, using the Openscapes Flywheel (Robinson & Lowndes 2022).

In this session we will give an abbreviated version of this talk to set the tone for others in and across institutions to share their stories of crossing the chasm.

Value to Session Participants
We encourage participants to learn and turn around and amplify stories, fork them, and be inspired to tell stories of their own.

Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session
No recommendations provided


Speakers
JL

Julia Lowndes

Director, Openscapes
Dr. Julia Stewart Lowndes is Openscapes founding director and co-leads NASA Openscapes and NOAA Fisheries Openscapes projects. I am a marine ecologist working at the intersection of actionable science, data science, and open science. My main focus is mentoring teams to develop technical... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
TBA

9:00am PDT

9:00am PDT

Replicating Critical Climate Data
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
Speakers
avatar for Ben Galewsky

Ben Galewsky

Senior Research Software Engineer, University of Illinois
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
TBA

9:00am PDT

Turning Earth Data into Action: AI for Wildfire Risk Prediction
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
As climate change drives increasingly destructive wildfire behavior, actionable, real-time intelligence is no longer a luxury, it’s a necessity. This session will showcase WindTL, an AI-powered wildfire modeling platform developed by SkyTL, designed to transform Earth observation data into operational insights for emergency responders, insurers, utilities, and land managers.

The session will explore how WindTL blends physics-informed neural networks (PINNs), machine learning, and real-time sensor fusion to predict wildfire behavior and ember spread — responsible for up to 90% of structure losses during wildfires. We'll share how WindTL operationalizes research-grade fire modeling and delivers user-friendly risk maps and simulations in minutes, even in low-connectivity environments.

We’ll also demonstrate how we’ve scaled WindTL using Google Cloud technologies, including Vertex AI and Kubernetes, to deliver national-scale impact. Real-world examples will include how WindTL accurately predicted ember crossing during the Thompson Fire, enabling faster resource deployment and protection of high-value homes.

The session will conclude with a live demo of the WindTL platform, a discussion on model transparency and community trust, and a call for cross-sector collaboration to accelerate innovation in wildfire resilience.


Value to Session Participants: Participants will gain practical insight into how cutting-edge AI, machine learning, and geospatial data integration are being used in the field today to support wildfire prediction, planning, and response. Through real-world examples, live demonstrations, and collaborative discussion, attendees will see how operational tools like WindTL turn research into action, bridging the gap between innovation and impact.

For scientists and researchers, the session offers an opportunity to explore how their datasets, models, and tools can be integrated into operational platforms. For emergency managers and risk professionals, it provides a look at how actionable intelligence can be deployed in real time to guide decisions. For technologists, it opens up pathways to scale similar models across other climate and disaster domains.


Recommended Ways to Prepare for this Session: Some discussion topics: What barriers still exist in translating wildfire science into real-time operational use? How can AI models be responsibly integrated into emergency decision-making workflows? Where are there opportunities for collaboration in wildfire data collection, validation, or deployment? What tools or datasets should be prioritized for integration into platforms like WindTL?
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:30am PDT
TBA
 
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