
FUTUREWATER SL
FUTUREWATER SL
7 Projects, page 1 of 2
Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2025Partners:Administraţia Naţională de Meteorologie, Cap 2020, FUTUREWATER SL, GRED, Fondazione CIMA +1 partnersAdministraţia Naţională de Meteorologie,Cap 2020,FUTUREWATER SL,GRED,Fondazione CIMA,M&SFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101082189Overall Budget: 2,059,060 EURFunder Contribution: 1,705,230 EURThe MAGDA project aims at developing a toolchain for atmosphere monitoring, weather forecasting, and severe weather/irrigation/crop monitoring advisory, with GNSS (including Galileo) at its core, to provide useful information to agricultural operators. MAGDA will exploit the untapped potential of assimilating GNSS-derived, drone-derived, Copernicus EO-derived datasets, in situ weather sensors into very high-resolution, short-range (1-2 days ahead) and very short-range (less than 1 day ahead) numerical weather forecasts to provide improved prediction of severe weather events (rainfall, snow, hail, wind, heat and cold waves) as well as of weather-driven agriculture pests and diseases to the benefit of agriculture operations, also in light of ongoing effects of climate change. These targets will be achieved by setting up a database of variables of interest, and an assimilation system to feed a numerical weather prediction model, which in turn drives a hydrological model for irrigation performance and water accounting to assess water use and related productivity. In addition to already existing observational networks, new dedicated networks of sensors, including GNSS and drones, to monitor atmospheric variables at high spatial resolution will be deployed in the vicinity of large farms and cultivated areas, to provide data with high spatial and temporal resolutions for the assimilation into the weather model. The delivery of the augmented forecasts and irrigation advisories to farmers will be enabled by a dedicated dashboard and APIs to already existing Farm Management Systems. The tools developed within MAGDA will represent the technical and methodological components based on which services to support agricultural operations will be defined.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2015 - 2019Partners:GFZ, Deltares, UPV, Polytechnic University of Milan, Met Office +20 partnersGFZ,Deltares,UPV,Polytechnic University of Milan,Met Office,INRAE,LG,KNMI,Arctik,VU,ECMWF,BSC,Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment,ADELPHI RESEARCH GEMEINNUTZIGE GMBH,HKV LIJN IN WATER BV,Water Footprint Network,CETAQUA,University of Reading,TUC,PIK,HZG,FUTUREWATER SL,Fondazione CIMA,SMHI,BFGFunder: European Commission Project Code: 641811Overall Budget: 7,996,850 EURFunder Contribution: 7,996,850 EURIMproving PRedictions and management of hydrological EXtremes For a better anticipation on future high impact hydrological extremes disrupting safety of citizens, agricultural production, transportation, energy production and urban water supply, and overall economic productivity, prediction and foresighting capabilities and their intake in these strategic sectors need to be improved. IMPREX will improve forecast skill of meteorological and hydrological extremes in Europe and their impacts, by applying dynamic model ensembles, process studies, new data assimilation techniques and high resolution modeling. Novel climate change impact assessment concepts will focus at increasing the realism of relevant events by specific high resolution regional downscaling, explore compounding trans-sectoral and trans-regional risks, and design new risk management paradigms. These developments are demonstrated in impact surveys for strategic economic sectors in a set of case studies in which local stakeholders, public organizations and SMEs are involved. A pan-European assessment of risk management and adaptation strategies is applied, minimizing risk transfer from one sector or region to another. As a key outreach product, a periodic hydrological risk outlook for Europe is produced, incorporating the dynamic evolution of hydro-climatic and socio-economic processes. The project outreach maximizes the legacy impact of the surveys, aimed at European public stakeholder and business networks, including user-friendly assessment summaries, and training material. The project responds to the call by targeting the quality of short-to-medium hydro-meteorological predictions, enhancing the reliability of future climate projections, apply this information to strategic sectoral and pan-European surveys at different scales, and evaluate and adapt current risk management strategies. With its integrative approach, IMPREX will link current management decisions and actions with an emergent future.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2020 - 2022Partners:GFZ, EODC, UZH, FUTUREWATER SL, UB +7 partnersGFZ,EODC,UZH,FUTUREWATER SL,UB,CNES,CLS,MAGELLIUM SAS,Graz University of Technology,TUW,FMI,IGRACFunder: European Commission Project Code: 870353Overall Budget: 2,923,500 EURFunder Contribution: 2,923,500 EURGroundwater is one of the most important freshwater resources for mankind and for ecosystems. Assessing groundwater resources and developing sustainable water management plans based on this resource is a major field of activity for science, water authorities and consultancies worldwide. Due to its fundamental role in the Earth’s water and energy cycles, groundwater has been declared as an Essential Climate Variable (ECV) by GCOS, the Global Climate Observing System. The Copernicus Services, however, do not yet deliver data on this fundamental resource, nor is there any other data source worldwide that operationally provides information on changing groundwater resources in a consistent way, observation-based, and with global coverage. This gap will be closed by G3P, the Global Gravity-based Groundwater Product. The G3P consortium combines key expertise from science and industry across Europe that optimally allows to (1) capitalize from the unique capability of GRACE and GRACE-FO satellite gravimetry as the only remote sensing technology to monitor subsurface mass variations and thus groundwater storage change for large areas, (2) incorporate and advance a wealth of products on storage compartments of the water cycle that are part of the Copernicus portfolio, and (3) disseminate unprecedented information on changing groundwater storage to the global and European user communities, including a European use case as a demonstrator for industry potential in the water sector. In combination, the G3P development is a novel and cross-cutting extension of the Copernicus portfolio towards essential information on the changing state of water resources at European and global scales. G3P is timely given the recent launch of GRACE-FO that opens up the chance for gravity-based time series with sufficient length to monitor climate-induced and human-induced processes over more than 20 years, and to boost European space technology on board these satellites.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2020Partners:NAAR-NIHWM, CONSUS CARBON ENGINEERING SPOLKA Z OGRANICZONA ODPAWIEDZIALNOSCIA, RINA-C, ICRE8, MIGAL - Galilee research Institute +20 partnersNAAR-NIHWM,CONSUS CARBON ENGINEERING SPOLKA Z OGRANICZONA ODPAWIEDZIALNOSCIA,RINA-C,ICRE8,MIGAL - Galilee research Institute,ECOLOGIC INSTITUT ge,GIFF,NATIONAL TERRITORIAL PLANNING AGENCY,ISMAI,KUL,UNIBO,L'ORANGERIE STUDIO,TU Delft,SPECTRUM CONSTRUCT SRL,HKV LIJN IN WATER BV,UCL,Thetis,ICATALIST,GRED,UOXF,AQUAPROIECT,FUTUREWATER SL,BUREAUVERITAS POLAND LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY,THE FUNDING COMPANY,UTCBFunder: European Commission Project Code: 700699Overall Budget: 8,817,440 EURFunder Contribution: 7,739,810 EURRecent studies from the IPCC indicate that Europe is particularly prone to increased risks of river and coastal floods, droughts resulting in water restrictions and damages from extreme weather such as heat events and wildfires. Evaluations also show a huge potential to reduce these risks with novel adaptation strategies. Researchers, innovators and incubators develop innovative products and services to reduce the increased climate change risks. Many of these innovations however hardly arrive at the markets. BRIGAID BRIdges the GAp for Innovations in Disaster resilience. BRIGAID's approach is supported by three pillars. (1) At first BRIGAID takes into account the geographical variability of climate-related hazards and their interaction with socio-economic changes, (2) BRIGAID establishes structural, on-going support for innovations that are ready for validation in field tests and real life demonstrations and (3) BRIGAID develops a framework that enables an independent, scientific judgement of the socio-technological effectiveness of an innovation. BRIGAID's objective is ambitious but achievable with strong consortium partners in EU, two Associated Countries and support from Overseas Territories. BRIGAID (a) brings actively together innovators and end-users in Communities of Innovation, resulting in increased opportunities for market-uptake; (b) contributes to the development of a technological and performance standards for adaptation options by providing a Test and Implementation Framework (TIF) and test facilities throughout Europe; (c) Improves innovation capacity and the integration of new knowledge by establishing an innovators network and (d) strengthens the competitiveness and growth of companies with the support of a dedicated business team. Finally BRIGAID develops a business models and market outreach to launch innovations to the market and secure investments in innovations beyond BRIGAID’s lifetime.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2022Partners:MICROSTEP-MIS, GRED, Polytechnic University of Milan, TU Delft, Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres +14 partnersMICROSTEP-MIS,GRED,Polytechnic University of Milan,TU Delft,Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres,Government of South Africa,Imperial,SAWS,KNUST,GIA,FARMERLINE LTD,FUTUREWATER SL,HCP INTERNATIONAL,Strathmore University,TAHMO KENYA,UFZ,Starlab Barcelona Sl,WPC,Makerere UniversityFunder: European Commission Project Code: 776691Overall Budget: 5,006,820 EURFunder Contribution: 4,979,620 EURObjectives: Provide currently unavailable geo-information on weather, water and climate for sub-Saharan Africa by enhancing satellite-based geo-data with innovative in situ sensors and developing related information services that answer needs of African stakeholders and the GEOSS community. Concept: A systematic feedback loop to reciprocally validate in situ measurements and satellite data in one integrated model. Over 500 in situ measurement stations using citizen science. State of the art advancement & Innovation potential: Building on and pushing further recent advances in sensor and communication technology to provide cheaper and more robust in situ measurements covering a wider area at a higher resolution in sub-Saharan Africa. Working with tech-hubs in Europe and Africa to feed creation and growth of European and African start-ups that develop sensors and geo-services, delivering complete value chains from sensor to customer-ready information delivery. Impact on call expectations: -Integration of in situ components into models based on GEOSS and Copernicus data -OGC compliant science-grade geo-data (atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere) delivered to GEOSS, incl. near-real time statistically characterized soil moisture data from Africa that can be used operationally (not currently available) and radar derived soil moisture measurements also available under cloudy conditions, or vegetation overgrowth -at least 20 new products for use in food, water, energy security, climate change and resilience to natural hazards validated and ready for large-scale implementation by consortium partners and external stakeholders -based on at least 10 innovative, cost efficient, robust, sensors, including fast neutron coun-ter, track¬ing of convective storms with consumer lightning sensors and accelerometer for tree-crown weighing -(Bio-degradable) sensors reduced to one tenth to one hundredth of their current price, extremely low-maintenance, use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.
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