Description
Despite advances in remote sensing, precipitation observations remain one of the weakest links in the description of Earth’s water cycle. This is especially critical in the face of climate change, human-induced hydrologic changes e.g. due to rapid urbanisation, and consequent increase in frequency and magnitude of extreme events. Opportunistic sensing can greatly improve spatial and temporal resolution of standard precipitation monitoring networks on continental scale by complementing them with measurements from personal weather stations or devices primarily not intended for precipitation monitoring such as commercial microwave links or broadband satellite terminals. The number of opportunistic sensors has already now exceeded traditional in-situ observations by an order of magnitude, and it is increasing exponentially. Nevertheless, it is still unclear how to make this data operationally accessible, achieve robust quality control of these observations, and integrate them into standard observation systems.
OPENSENSE brings together scientists investigating different opportunistic sensors, experts from national weather services, owners of sensor networks, and end-users of rainfall products to build a worldwide reference opportunistic sensing community. It will i) overcome key barriers preventing data exchange and acceptance as hydrometeorological observations ii) define standards to allow for large-scale benchmarking of OS precipitation products developing new methods for precipitation retrieval iii) coordinate integration of the opportunistic observations into traditional monitoring networks, and iv) identify potential new sources of precipitation observations.
These coordinated activities will boost uptake of OS as precipitation observation methods and enable generation of high-quality precipitation products with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution.
Action keywords
climate change - hydrometeorological observations - rainfall retrieval - interoperable sensor data - data mining and value creation
Management Committee
Country | MC Member |
---|---|
Austria | |
Austria | |
Belgium | |
Belgium | |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | |
Bulgaria | |
Bulgaria | |
Croatia | |
Croatia | |
Cyprus | |
Cyprus | |
Czech Republic | |
Denmark | |
Denmark | |
Finland | |
France | |
Germany | |
Germany | |
Greece | |
Hungary | |
Hungary | |
Ireland | |
Ireland | |
Israel | |
Israel | |
Italy | |
Italy | |
Latvia | |
Luxembourg | |
Luxembourg | |
Malta | |
Netherlands | |
Netherlands | |
North Macedonia | |
Norway | |
Poland | |
Poland | |
Portugal | |
Portugal | |
Romania | |
Romania | |
Serbia | |
Serbia | |
Slovakia | |
Slovenia | |
Spain | |
Sweden | |
Sweden | |
Switzerland | |
Türkiye | |
Türkiye | |
United Kingdom | |
United Kingdom |
Main Contacts
Action Contacts
COST Staff
Leadership
Role | Leader |
---|---|
Action Chair | |
Action Vice-Chair | |
Grant Holder Scientific Representative | |
Science Communication Coordinator | |
Grant Awarding Coordinator | |
WG1 Leader | |
WG2 Leader | |
WG3 Leader | |
WG4 Leader | |
WG5 Leader |
Additional roles
Role | Leader |
---|---|
Grant Holder Scientific Representative | |
WG1 co-leader | |
WG2 co-leader | |
WG3 co-leader | |
WG4 co-leader | |
WG5 co-leader | |
Grant Awarding Committee member 1 | |
Grant Awarding Committtee member 2 |
Working Groups
Number | Title | Leader |
---|---|---|
1 | Data management and standardisation | |
2 | Method and software homogenisation | |
3 | Merging and application | |
4 | Stakeholder involvement and external communication | |
5 | Capacity building, knowledge exchange, and coordination |
Express your interest to join any of the working groups by applying below.
It is required to have an e-COST profile to submit your application. If needed, create it first and then click 'Apply'.
ApplyMembership
Name | Working Group | Country |
---|---|---|
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Czechia | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Germany | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Sweden | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Netherlands | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Latvia | |
WG 1 | Cyprus | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Bulgaria | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 3 | Bulgaria | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Austria | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Czechia | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Denmark | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 4, WG 5 | Malta | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 5 | Belgium | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 5 | Ireland | |
WG 1 | Italy | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Sweden | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4 | Portugal | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Germany | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 5 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | ||
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4 | Germany | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 3 | Czechia | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Netherlands | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Italy | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Germany | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Poland | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Switzerland | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 5 | United Kingdom | |
WG 1, WG 4, WG 5 | Greece | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Germany | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Germany | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Israel | |
WG 1 | France | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | United Kingdom | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Czechia | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Czechia | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Türkiye | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Italy | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 4 | Germany | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 5 | North Macedonia | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Italy | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Türkiye | |
WG 1, WG 4 | United Kingdom | |
WG 1 | Italy | |
WG 1 | France | |
WG 1 | France | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 5 | Italy | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Czechia | |
WG 1 | Netherlands | |
WG 1, WG 3 | Spain | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 3 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Finland | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 4 | Italy | |
WG 1, WG 3, WG 5 | Italy | |
WG 1, WG 2, WG 4 | Israel | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Czechia | |
WG 1, WG 2 | Czechia | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Netherlands | |
WG 2, WG 4 | Luxembourg | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Denmark | |
WG 2 | France | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Hungary | |
WG 2 | Türkiye | |
WG 2, WG 3, WG 5 | Italy | |
WG 2 | ||
WG 2 | Italy | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Netherlands | |
WG 2 | Germany | |
WG 2, WG 3 | ||
WG 2, WG 3 | Hungary | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Germany | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Poland | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Norway | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Lebanon | |
WG 2 | ||
WG 2 | Poland | |
WG 2 | Türkiye | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Netherlands | |
WG 2 | France | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Israel | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Spain | |
WG 2 | Sweden | |
WG 2, WG 3, WG 5 | Sweden | |
WG 2 | Germany | |
WG 2, WG 3 | Netherlands | |
WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Italy | |
WG 3 | Serbia | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Serbia | |
WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Italy | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Sweden | |
WG 3 | Hungary | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Germany | |
WG 3, WG 5 | Slovenia | |
WG 3 | Slovakia | |
WG 3, WG 5 | Switzerland | |
WG 3 | Austria | |
WG 3 | Türkiye | |
WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | France | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Cyprus | |
WG 3 | Serbia | |
WG 3 | Italy | |
WG 3 | Netherlands | |
WG 3 | ||
WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Netherlands | |
WG 3 | Norway | |
WG 3 | Belgium | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Portugal | |
WG 3 | ||
WG 3, WG 4 | Romania | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Bosnia & Herzegovina | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Portugal | |
WG 3 | Italy | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Cyprus | |
WG 3, WG 4 | Italy | |
WG 3 | Denmark | |
WG 3 | Denmark | |
WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Belgium | |
WG 3 | United States | |
WG 3, WG 5 | Belgium | |
WG 3 | Czechia | |
WG 3, WG 4, WG 5 | Croatia | |
WG 3, WG 5 | Croatia | |
WG 3 | Netherlands | |
WG 3 | Germany | |
WG 3 | Belgium | |
WG 4, WG 5 | ||
WG 4 | Portugal | |