Researchers revolutionise opportunities for the European water industry
15 February 2006
Joint press release from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (CEH), DHI Water and Environment, Delft Hydraulics and HR Wallingford.
A team of international researchers has revolutionised the opportunities for water industry software developers. They have developed a new toolkit that, for the first time, provides a common standard for linking essential computer programmes that help balance our water supplies against the demand from domestic, leisure and industrial users.
The Open Modelling Interface (OpenMI) will not only make life easier for thousands of water and environmental managers across Europe, it will open up the business market for small companies and universities who are developing computer models.
This new common standard approach is considered so important the European Commission is hosting the OpenMI launch at an international meeting in Brussels on 15 February.
Under the EU's Water Framework Directive water managers must consider all of the likely social, economic and environmental impacts of their policies before they implement them. The OpenMI will help them to do this and also save them money.
Roger Moore, the Open MI project leader from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, explains.
"Water and environmental managers use computer models to help them find solutions to problems and predict how their decisions and actions will affect a whole chain of different elements. For example, a few years ago they might only have considered the benefits to a region's economy by allowing power-boating on lakes. They now have to balance that decision against what effect the noise and possible pollution of this activity will have on the water, the plants and fish, and the local fishing industry."
"Until now, when these managers have wanted to link models together
and explore how different processes interact they have had
to buy complete modelling systems covering, for example,
ecology, chemistry, hydrology and economy. These might not always have
contained the ideal set of models. In future they will be able to buy
the best mix from a variety of suppliers and join them up themselves."
He added, "The unique thing about the Open MI is that it
provides a standard that links the computer models and allows
them to talk to each other while they are actually running."
To support the Open MI and its users into the future, the project team is also launching a membership association at the Brussels meeting. Any organisations with an interest in decision support or modelling relating to the environment or water industries are encouraged to join. Instructions on how to join will shortly be available on their website.
Further information
Barnaby Smith
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Press office
Tel: 07832 160960
Notes
1. The scope document on the Open MI website has an overview of the Open MI with simple explanatory diagrams.
2. The Open MI is the result of an five year public/private partnership, involving 14 organisations from 7 European countries. The project cost €6M and was equally funded by the EC and the project partners. It forms part of the EC Fifth Framework Programme. A full list of project partners is available from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Press Office.
3. The Open MI consortium has been led by the UK's Centre for Ecology and Hydrology and three major European commercial producers of water related decision support and modelling systems: DHI Water and Environment, Delft Hydraulics and HR Wallingford.
Press release: 7/06
External links
- Open MI
- Open MI scope document
- CEH website
- DHI Water and Environment
- Delft Hydraulics
- HR Wallingford
Press links
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