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e-Infrastructures Call-9 (WP2011) Kostas Glinos European Commission - DG INFSO Head of Unit, Géant and e-Infrastructures ••• 1 Digital Agenda for Europe the policy context DAE is one of the flagships of "Europe 2020: a strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth" Digital Agenda for Europe the policy context “The Digital Agenda for Europe outlines policies and actions to maximise the benefit of the digital revolution for all. Supporting research and innovation is a key priority of the Agenda, essential if we want to establish a flourishing digital economy.” Neelie Kroes, Vice-President of the EC, responsible for the Digital Agenda e-Infrastructures Vision empower research communities through ubiquitous, trusted and easy access to services for data, computation, communication and collaborative work Sharing and federating scientific data Sharing computers, software and instruments Linking at the speed of the light ....... Scientific facilities, research communities ••• 5 Status of GÉANT in Europe ••• 6 EGI/EGEE: Tackling Global Challenges Astrophysics and astroparticle physics Biomedical and bioinformatics Computational chemistry Computational sciences High Energy Physics Disaster recovery Digital Libraries Earth sciences Infrastructure Geophysics >340 sites Finance >70 000 CPUs, 25 PByte of storage Fusion ~150 000 jobs successfully completed per day 270 Virtual Organisations >8000 registered users, representing 1000s of scientists ••• 7 DEISA: Virtual HPC Services 11 sites/7 countries connected at 10 Gb/s Over 22,000 CPUs sporting 200 TFlop Larger parallel applications in individual sites Workflow applications with grid technologies Global data management service Extreme Computing Initiative ••• 8 Overview: Scientific Data e-Infrastructure scientific data infrastructure distributed computing/software infrastructure network infrastructure, GÉANT ••• 9 ICT infrastructures for e-Science COM(2009) 108 Three vectors of a renewed European strategy: Europe as hub Sustainable and of excellence in continuous services e-Science of production quality 24/7 Innovation by exploiting know-how beyond science (public services, large scale experimentation,…) e-Infrastructure ••• 10 Funding per topic (FP6, FP7*) (1) Millions (*) 350 including FP7-INFRA Call 5 Total EC Funding (€) 300 250 Layers 200 Support, Policy Virtual Research Communities Data Computing Connectivity/Network 150 100 50 0 FP6 FP7 FP Support to Infrastructure vs support to user communities 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% Data User Communities (€) Support & policy (€) Infrastructure (€) 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% FP6 FP7 FP ••• 12 Millions Support to user communities per infrastructure layer 300 250 200 Data User Communities (€) Support/policy (€) Infrastructure (€) 150 100 50 0 Connectivity/Network Computing Data Layers Virtual Research Communities Support, Policy ••• 13 International Dimension 100% Number of Projects yes yes 90% 80% yes yes yes 70% 60% 50% no no 40% 30% INCO Dimension yes no no no no 20% 10% 0% Connectivity/Network Computing Data Layers Virtual Research Communities Support, Policy ••• 14 Millions Main user communities supported 30 25 20 FP FP7 FP6 15 10 5 0 SSH Environmental Sciences Energy and transports Biological and Medical Sciences Data Materials and Analytical Facilities Physical Sciences and Engineering Security/Civil protection ••• 15 User community support per infrastructure layer 100% 90% 80% 70% Data Security/Civil protection 60% Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials and Analytical Facilities 50% Biological and Medical Sciences Energy and transports 40% Environmental Sciences SSH 30% 20% 10% 0% Connectivity/Network Computing Data Layers Virtual Research Communities ••• 16 FP7-INFRA-2010-2 Call 7 overview Opened: 30/07/2009 Closed: 24/11/2009 107 proposals received (106 eligible) Budget M EUR Retained Proposals 48.3 6 20 1 Simulation software and services 12.1 5 Virtual Research Communities 24.2 10 Coordination actions, conferences and studies supporting policy development 10.4 16 Topics called Distributed computing infrastructure (DCI) High Performance Computing service PRACE ••• 17 RI WP2011 (e-Infrastructure part) - main objectives Consolidation and reinforcement • of existing initiatives (data infrastructures, HPC, user communities etc) Integration • of e-Infrastructure layers • into e-Science environments • service oriented approach Openness • to new technologies and concepts Support actions NCPs … ICT €27M medical spectroscopy fusion physics geosciences astronomy climatology space biology €4M environment DRAFT User Communities Data layer eScience Environment Simulation software & services layer Computing layer: Distributed Computing & PRACE Network layer €1M €43M PRACE €20M e-Science environments (indicative budget: €27m) Seamless service provision to Research Communities • network/computing/data integration; unified access • resource virtualisation, hybrid cloud-grid implementations Design, development and deployment of interfaces • Advanced software tools and techniques • Standardisation Virtual access, facilities and testbeds • Access (lower barriers, cost effectiveness, interfaces,...) • Composition of virtual facilities e-Science support centres and training including for ESFRI communities Also: Pilot implementations, non-researcher usage, open standards and APIs, clear licensing schemes, international cooperation Data infrastructures for e-Science (indicative budget: €43m) General objective: Establish a persistent and robust service infrastructure for scientific data in Europe that responds to the needs of the data-intensive Science of 2020 INFRA-2011-1.2.2 More specifically: Deployment of generic services for persistent data storage, access and management that assure data provenance, authenticity and integrity and respond to the needs of advanced user communities Development of an open access, participatory infrastructure for scientific information linking peer-reviewed literature and associated data sets and collections which can be open to nonscientists and to providers of value-added services Scientific community-driven policy development and service deployment for data generation, provenance, quality assessment, certification, curation, annotation, navigation and management so as to promote the sharing of data and the development of trust INFRA-2011-1.2.2 Development and deployment of tools and techniques for the provision of advanced data services notably for data discovery, mining, visualisation and simulation All proposals are encouraged to: (a) consider the international dimension of their activities; (b) address education and training; (c) address social factors and incentives or rewards that would encourage the use of open data infrastructures by scientists; (d) leverage national e-Science initiatives on data; (e) foster the use and deployment of open standards and APIs in order to encourage value-added services by third parties; (f) set up help/support lines for users where appropriate; (g) consider appropriate licensing schemes for open source software; (h) address financial sustainability. Data infrastructures for e-Science (indicative budget: €43m) Service deployment for data storage & manag’t • Data provenance, authenticity, integrity • Legal aspects, business models, interoperability, PPPs • Financial and environmental sustainability Open access infrastructures • IPR frameworks, financing models, interoperability Community-driven infrastructures & policies data generation, provenance, quality assessment, certification, curation, annotation • Harmonisation of metadata, semantics, ontologies Tool frameworks (e.g. visualisation, mining) Encouraged: international cooperation, open standards, training, social factors,… High Performance Computing (HPC) (indicative budget: €20m) Integration of DEISA services in PRACE Peta-scaling of applications • In synchrony with PRACE procurement plans • Led by user communities • Vendor involvement • Applications of societal relevance Prototyping of new architectures/machines Support actions (draft) (indicative budget: €4+1m; financial limits apply!) Laying the theoretical foundations of e-infrastructure development Involving youngsters / citizens in Science through eInfrastructure Social and human aspects; trust Development of skills and curricula for information & data scientists Business models for supporting open Science International cooperation in REN for (a) EU- China link and (b) feasibility of transantlantic connectivity with Latin America + Continuation of NCP network ICT WP2011-12: Exascale computing (indicative budget: €25m) Develop a few advanced computing platforms with extreme performance (100 petaflop/s in 2014 with potential for exascale by 2020) Develop optimised application codes for above systems driven by the computational needs of science & engineering today's grand challenges (climate change, energy, industrial design & manufacturing, systems biology etc) Strong synergy with PRACE International cooperation • Leaflet on the RI Call 9: http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/einfrastructure/publications_en.html • Web page of the Call 9 information day held on 11.06.10: http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/e-infrastructure/events20100611_en.html • E-mail for questions related to the call: [email protected] • Once published (20.07.09) the call page will be accessible from: http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/dc/index.cfm • e-Infrastructures home page: http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/e-infrastructure/home_en.html ••• 28 Contacts INFRA-2011-1.2.1: e-Science environments Contact: Enric Mitjana, Ioannis Sagias INFRA-2011-1.2.2: Data infrastructures for e-Science Contact: Krystyna Marek, Carlos Morais Pires INFRA-2011-2.3.5: Second implementation phase of the European High Performance Computing (HPC) service PRACE Contact: Bernhard Fabianek, Carmela Asero INFRA-2011-3.4: Coordination actions, conferences and studies supporting policy development, including international cooperation, for e-Infrastructures Contact: Bernhard Fabianek, Carmela Asero INFRA-2011-3.5: Trans-national cooperation among NCPs Contact: Bernhard Fabianek, Carmela Asero [email protected] rising tide of data… A fundamental characteristic of our age is the raising tide of data – global, diverse, valuable and complex. In the realm of science, this is both an opportunity and a challenge. Report of the High-Level Experts Group on Scientific Data, to be published in October “Riding the wave How Europe can Gain from the rising tide of scientific data” vision 2030 high-level experts group on Scientific Data “Our vision is a scientific e-infrastructure that supports seamless access, use, re-use, and trust of data. In a sense, the physical and technical infrastructure becomes invisible and the data themselves become the infrastructure – a valuable asset, on which science, technology, the economy and society can advance.” high-level experts group on Scientific Data Data as Infrastructure Vision 2030 of the High-Level Group on Scientific Data Source: High-level Group on Scientific Data Aggregated Data Sets (Temporary or Permanent) Other Data Climatology Biology Scientific Data (Discipline Specific) Workflows Aggregation Path Researcher 2 Researcher 1 Scientific World • API • Data Discovery & Navigation • Workflows Generation • Computing Infrastructure • Persistent Storage Capacity • Integrity • Authentication & Security Community Support Services Data Services Non Scientific World Future perspectives e-Infrastructures underpinning a creativity machine Contribution to ERA and “5th freedom”, Digital Agenda, Innovation Union; Communications on HPC and Access e-Infrastructures in transition • Towards infrastructure-as-a-service • From connectivity and grids to an integrated offer involving networks, data, all computing and software • Progressive and disparate involvement of users • Governance and financial models in evolution More emphasis on Scientific Data Infrastructures “Data’s shameful neglect” (Nature, 10 September 2009) International dimension important e-Infrastructures underpinning a creativity machine… “We humans have built a creativity machine. It’s the sum of three things: a few hundred million of computers, a communication system connecting those computers, and some millions of human beings using those computers and communications.” Vernor Vinge (Nature, Vol 440, March 2006) ••• 36