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e-infrastructures for open science

CRIS201211th International Conference on Current Research Information Systems

Prague, 6 June 2012

Kostas GlinosEuropean Commission

Views expressed do not commit the European Commission

The evolution ofe-infrastructure

e-Infrastructures

Hub

Node:

“Domain Specific hub”

“National hub”

§ >340 sites§ >70 000 CPUs, 25 PByte of storage§ ~150 000 jobs successfully completed per day§ 270 Virtual Organisations § >8000 registered users, representing 1000s of scientists

Astrophysics and astroparticle physicsBiomedical and bioinformatics

Computational chemistryComputational sciences

High Energy PhysicsDisaster recoveryDigital LibrariesEarth sciencesInfrastructure

GeophysicsFinance Fusion

§ >340 sites§ >70 000 CPUs, 25 PByte of storage§ ~150 000 jobs successfully completed per day§ 270 Virtual Organisations § >8000 registered users, representing 1000s of scientists

§ >340 sites§ >70 000 CPUs, 25 PByte of storage§ ~150 000 jobs successfully completed per day§ 270 Virtual Organisations § >8000 registered users, representing 1000s of scientists

Astrophysics and astroparticle physicsBiomedical and bioinformatics

Computational chemistryComputational sciences

High Energy PhysicsDisaster recoveryDigital LibrariesEarth sciencesInfrastructure

GeophysicsFinance Fusion

HPC

Accessing and managing knowledge: scientific data and publications

Innovating the scientific process: global virtual research communities

What we do for Science…European Commission and Member States invest in e-Infrastructures…

Linking at the speed of the light: GÉANT

scientific data and publications

Experimenting in silico: simulation and visualisation

Sharing the best computational resources: e-Science grid, clouds, supercomputing

Research infrastructures

• Definition:• Facilities, resources, organisational systems and

services that are used by the research communities to conduct research and innovation in their fields

• This includes: • major scientific equipment or sets of instruments; • major scientific equipment or sets of instruments; • knowledge-based resources such as collections, archives or

scientific data; • e-infrastructure, such as data, computing and software

systems, communication networks and systems to promote openness and digital trust

• From FP7 to Horizon 2020

European R&D Framework Programme(2007 to 2013)

Capacities

4097 M€

JRC1751 M€

Euratom4062 M€

Cooperation32413 M€

4097 M€

Ideas7510 M€

People4750 M€

Dev. of policiesINCO

Sciencein Society

Research Infrastructures

42% - 1715 M€

SMEsResearch Potential

Regions of Knowledge

e-Infrastructures(ICT for Science)

572 M€

Climatology

Biology

Scientific Data(Discipline Specific)

Other Data

Aggregated Data Sets(Temporary or Permanent)

Source: High-level Group on Scientific Data

~100m for developing scientific datainfrastructures in FP7

Data Services (OpenAIRE, EUDAT,…)

Community Support Services

• Computing Infrastructure• Persistent Storage Capacity• Integrity• Authentication & Security

• API• Data Discovery & Navigation• Workflows Generation

Researcher 1

Non Scientific World

Scientific WorldResearcher 2

Workflows

Aggregation Path

Horizon 2020 architectureEurope 2020 priorities

Creating Industrial Leadership− Leadership in enabling and industrial

technologies

Shared objectives and principles

European Research AreaInternational cooperation

Tackling Societal Challenges− Health, demographic change and wellbeing

Simplified access Dissemination &

knowledge tranfer

− Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies−ICT−Nanotech., Materials, Manuf. and Processing −Biotechnology−Space

− Access to risk finance − Innovation in SMEs

Excellence in Science− Frontier research (ERC)− Future and Emerging Technologies (FET)− Skills and career development (Marie Curie)− Research infrastructures

Common rules, toolkit of funding schemes

− Health, demographic change and wellbeing− Food security and the bio-based economy− Secure, clean and efficient energy− Smart, green and integrated transport− Supply of raw materials− Resource efficiency and climate action− Inclusive, innovative and secure societies

Horizon 2020 – Commission proposal(2014 – 2020; budget: €80 B)

e-Infrastructures:

~ €1 billionPart of research infrastructuresUnder Excellent ScienceSupporting all H2020 domains

Research Infrastructures under Horizon 2020 (2014-2020)

• Development of European RIs• Developing pan-European RIs (and regional potential)• Integrating and opening national RIs of pan-EU interest

3 action lines

• Integrating and opening national RIs of pan-EU interest• Development, deployment & operation of e-Infrastructures

• Reinforcing the RI innovation potential & their human capital• Promoting the innovation potential of RI• Strengthening human capital

• Supporting consistency / efficiency of MSs & EU RI policies• Strengthening the EU RI policy• Strategic international cooperation

e-infrastructure: From FP7 to Horizon 2020

Building the “digital ERA” for all researchers

• Data-centric science and engineering

• Computational infrastructure (HPC, grids, clouds, software)• Computational infrastructure (HPC, grids, clouds, software)

• Research and education networks

• Virtual research communities and e-science

Consultations started in 2011 and continue till end 2012

• Policy evolution

• From the Communication on “scientific information in • From the Communication on “scientific information in the digital age” of 2007

• …through the “ICT infrastructures for e-Science” Communication of 2009

• …to today

Neelie Kroes:

“let’s make science open”

ICT transforming science: collaboration and sharing knowledge at unprecedented scale and speed

How to do it?

Open Science through…… (open) infrastructures

We mean by Open Science the optimal sharing of knowledge and supporting tools such as publications, research data, software, educational publications, research data, software, educational resources and infrastructures across institutional, disciplinary and national boundaries

Open Science

Open Scientific Content

data, computational resources and software resulting from public funded research should be made openly available and preserved, for re-use in research and education activitiesresearch and education activities

Open Culture

career systems should support and reward those who participate in the culture of sharing. Open science should inspire the young and enable adequate education to benefit from the abundance of technical tools and scientific information

Open Infrastructures

reliable, high-performance and efficient infrastructures

ERA - European Research Area

• Five main priorities• More effective national research systems • Optimal transnational co-operation and competition • An open labour market for researchers • Gender equality and mainstreaming in research • Gender equality and mainstreaming in research • Optimal circulation and transfer of scientific knowledge

including via digital ERA

• Circulation and transfer of scientific knowledge• EC Recommendation to Member States on OA• Research stakeholder organisations to implement open access

for publications and data• Commission will adopt a Communication• Commission will propose a roadmap for e-infrastructure

development to support e-Science through open access to research tools and resources

Open access policy

Publications, data, e-infrastructure

all outputs of Horizon 2020 to be openly accessibleall outputs of Horizon 2020 to be openly accessible

Communication to European Parliament and Council

Recommendation to Member States

ERA - European Research Area

• Five main priorities• More effective national research systems • Optimal transnational co-operation and competition • An open labour market for researchers • Gender equality and mainstreaming in research • Gender equality and mainstreaming in research • Optimal circulation and transfer of scientific knowledge

including via digital ERA

• Circulation and transfer of scientific knowledge• EC Recommendation to Member States on OA• Research stakeholder organisations to implement open access

for publications and data• Commission will adopt a Communication• Commission will propose a roadmap for e-infrastructure

development to support e-Science through open access to research tools and resources

1st wave

”A fundamental characteristic of our age is the rising tide of data – global, diverse, valuable and complex. In the realm of science, this is both an the realm of science, this is both an opportunity and a challenge.”

Riding the Wave report, High-Level Group on DataOctober 2010

2nd wave

The report presents an overview of the present situation with regard to research data in Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom and offers broad and the United Kingdom and offers broad outlines for a possible action programme for the four countries in realising the envisaged collaborative data infrastructure.

A Surfboard for Riding the Wave by Knowledge ExchangeNovember 2011

reports and studies

Digital Preservation in EuropeBy Parse.Insight

10 Tales on Data SharingBy project ODE

DOI/DAIBy DIGOIDUNA

Global SDIBy GRDI2020

reports and studies

Governance(rules for access and preservation)

Information(Human and Machine)

need for coordination at European level

e-Infrastructureof

ServicesManag. of Databases/Repository

Discoverability/Provenance(Metadata, DOIs, DAIs, …)

Processing, Computation

Connectivity/Storage infrastructure

(Human and Machine)

Adapted from e-SciDR study

ofData

e-Infrastructure forData

CRIS

Environment

Atmosphere/Space Physics

Other Data

Aggregated Data Sets(Temporary or Permanent)

VRE

Tools for virtual research environments

Tools for virtual research environments

Generic services: preservation, curation storage and computation

Open Access:participatory, distributed infrastructure

Scientific Data(Discipline Specific)

Researcher 1

Non Scientific World

Scientific WorldResearcher 2

Workflows

Aggregation Path

VRE

Conclusion A strong commitment to open science will benefit science inside and outside of Europe

Open Science implies technical, institutional, organisational and even cultural changes, many of them mediated by ICT many of them mediated by ICT infrastructure

Horizon 2020 is “our” tool to work together on these issues…

How do we use it from 2014 to 2020 to deploy the e-infrastructure needed?

Thank you for your attention!

Environment

Atmosphere/Space Physics

Other Data

Aggregated Data Sets(Temporary or Permanent)

VRE

Tools for virtual research environments

Tools for virtual research environments

Generic services: preservation, curation storage and computation

Open Access:participatory, distributed infrastructure

Scientific Data(Discipline Specific)

Researcher 1

Non Scientific World

Scientific WorldResearcher 2

Workflows

Aggregation Path

VRE

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