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PI-GOOS Benefits |
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The aim of the PI-GOOS programme is to assist sustainable development in Pacific Island nations by facilitating the establishment and implementation of coastal and open ocean observing programmes, and helping to improve uptake and use of the data, information and products being generated.
What does this mean for you? The benefits of PI-GOOS are set out below. If you wish to discuss any of these in the context of your work, please contact the PI-GOOS Coordinator.
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Data Management & Access
PI-GOOS actively engages with data collectors and providers to ensure that marine data and products are well managed and made accessible to the marine, coastal, and climate community. Find out more...
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Observing Programmes
PI-GOOS supports the collection of marine observations from new and existing programmes by providing guidance on data collection standards, monitoring methods, and facilitating survey logistics. Find out more...
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Communication
PI-GOOS provides updates and information on marine observation programmes, along with marine data and data products, through a quarterly newsletter, Vai Pasifika, and via a regular news articles posted on the website. Find out more...
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Education & Training
PI-GOOS promotes understanding of marine observations along with the data, information, and knowledge generated from them through an active programme of schools education and professional training. Find out more...
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Photo Credits: Gregory Bennett, Reefbase, Scripps Argo Programme, NOAA, Marcie Grabowski
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PI-GOOS Overview |
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The Pacific Islands Global Ocean Observing System (PI-GOOS) was established in 1998, and is currently one of 12 GOOS Regional Alliances (GRA) operational worldwide (see map below). GRAs are designed to facilitate sustained coastal and open ocean monitoring to meet regional and national priorities, and form a critical component to the successful implementation of GOOS objectives.

Within the Pacific Islands region, PI-GOOS aims to assist sustainable development by facilitating the establishment and implementation of coastal and open ocean observing programmes, and in helping to improve uptake and use of the data, information and products being generated. Implementation of the PI-GOOS programme is primarily through capacity building at the local and regional level, and via the delivery of useful observation related products to relevant national level Government departments and other national partners.
In 2004 a full-time coordinator of PI-GOOS was appointed as a joint initiative between the Secretariat of the Pacific Islands Applied Geoscience Commission (SOPAC) and the Perth Regional Programme Office of the UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC-UNESCO). PI-GOOS serves all 15 Pacific Island SOPAC Member Countries and is coordinated from SOPAC’s offices in Suva, Fiji.
The work of PI-GOOS is overseen by an Advisory Committee comprising of donors and partners from across the Pacific region. The Advisory Committee meets once a year and reports at the Annual Session of the SOPAC Governing Council. This provides all SOPAC member countries with an opportunity to comment and advise on the future direction of the PI-GOOS programme.
Documents such as the PI-GOOS work plan, strategy, annual report, and terms of reference for the Advisory Committee can be downloaded from the Documents page.
PI-GOOS partners are listed here.
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GOOS Overview |
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The impetus for the creation of GOOS came from the IOC’s Technical Committee for Ocean Processes and Climate in the late 1980s. The concept of a global ocean observing system grew from the realisation that understanding and forecasting climate change would require a long-term, multivariate ocean observing system.
In 1988 the IOC created an ad hoc expert group to prepare proposals for the development of an integrated global ocean observing system leading to a world ocean watch. In 1989 the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) and the IOC endorsed the programme suggested by the expert group to design and implement a global operational observing system.
GOOS in its present form was created in 1991 when it was agreed that the ocean observing system concept should be broadened to include physical, chemical, and biological coastal ocean monitoring. The IOC established a GOOS Support Office (GSO) and the WMO agreed to act as co-sponsor.
In 1992, an Intergovernmental committee for GOOS (I-GOOS) was formed to coordinate the implementation of GOOS. A GOOS Technical and Scientific Advisory Panel (later to become the GSSC) was proposed the same year, and the GOOS Project Office (GPO) was set up within the IOC. By 1998 a GOOS strategic plan and prospectus had been published.
Today, GOOS is considered to be the oceanographic component of the Global Earth Observing System of Systems (GEOSS).
More information on GOOS can be obtained from www.ioc-goos.org.

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