EMS Annual Meeting Abstracts
Vol. 21, EMS2024-797, 2024, updated on 05 Jul 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2024-797
EMS Annual Meeting 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Friday, 06 Sep, 14:15–14:30 (CEST)| Aula Joan Maragall (A111)

New integrated Date Rescue Portal  - Facilitating DARE projects

Marlies van der Schee1, Gerard van der Schrier1, Martijn Majoor1, Kirien Whan1, Peer Hechler2, Paul Poli3, Maria Antónia Valente4, Stefan Brönnimann5, Stefan Grab6, Rob Allan7, and Peter Thorne8
Marlies van der Schee et al.
  • 1Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, De Bilt, The Netherlands (marlies.van.der.schee@knmi.nl)
  • 2World Meteorological Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  • 3European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecast, Bonn, Germany
  • 4University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal
  • 5University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
  • 6University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland
  • 7National Observatory of Athens, Athens, Greece
  • 8Maynooth University, Maynooth, Ireland

A new data rescue portal is designed to facilitate and coordinate the rescue of weather and climate data from around the world. It is hosted at https://datarescue.climate.copernicus.eu/. The practical information, data rescue (DARE) projects and metadata inventories originate from initiatives of both the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S). All practical information of the  WMO I-DARE portal is merged into this current project and will be replaced by the new portal. IEDRO and ACRE are collaborators for the content of the website.

The mission of the portal is as follows:

  • a collaborative framework on sharing information, best practices, know-how, guidance, metadata on data rescue projects and activities worldwide,
  • provides a single entry point for accessing information on the status of climate data being digitized or in need of recovery and digitization, and
  • enables collaboration among organizations, development agencies, donors, scientists, NGOs, citizens, to work on the data recovery and digitization of climate heritage which is at risk of loss forever.

One of the main features on the website is the opportunity to highlight your data rescue project. By making your efforts known and publicly available, chances are decreased that the same data is rescued twice by other groups. Additionally, we encourage owners of rescued data to share this in a global repository, so that the valued data will not get lost again. The data portal and project collection also serves as a  starting point for donors to select viable DARE projects which need support. It offers donors the perspective that DARE is done following internationally agreed procedures and that rescued data are shared with the global community rather than the data ending-up in some poorly accessible local file system, which is a multiplier of investment.

The C3S Datarescue work package contributes and monitors the efforts on using Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Deep Learning for Optical Character Recognition (OCR) to aid data rescue efforts. The development of a proof of concept for a data rescue image repository is in line with future methods to retrieve valuable meteorological data from scanned paper records with OCR. During the presentation, we will present the latest progress of the C3S DARE work package on the DARE portal, which includes articles on AI efforts to rescue meteorological data.

How to cite: van der Schee, M., van der Schrier, G., Majoor, M., Whan, K., Hechler, P., Poli, P., Valente, M. A., Brönnimann, S., Grab, S., Allan, R., and Thorne, P.: New integrated Date Rescue Portal  - Facilitating DARE projects, EMS Annual Meeting 2024, Barcelona, Spain, 1–6 Sep 2024, EMS2024-797, https://doi.org/10.5194/ems2024-797, 2024.