Understanding the usage of Australia’s critical climate change modelling software through user reporting, will inform the future of this service.
ACCESS-NRI, Australia’s Climate Simulator, is the national critical research infrastructure that provides software engineering support for Earth system and climate research.
Standing for the Australian Community Climate and Earth System Simulator – ACCESS – is a computer modelling framework that includes atmospheric, ocean, sea-ice, and land surface models coupled to a range of chemical and biological models. Its potential impact is far reaching, and enables crucial modelling and research, that contributes to international global climate reports, weather forecasting, seasonal prediction, climate projection and climate adaptation policy.
The Australian Access Federation (AAF) and ACCESS-NRI are partnering through the Trust and Identity Pathfinder program, funded by the Australian Government’s National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS), to explore the challenges of reporting on the usage of ACCESS-NRI assets such as code and data.
Andy Hogg, ACCESS-NRI’s Director says “ACCESS-NRI currently has limited direct data on the use of our assets and a high level of administrative burden is required to accurately identify and report on impact.
“Through partnering with the AAF as a Trust and Identity Pathfinder incubator, we are looking to explore how we can increase the efficiencies of reporting on use, as a measure of our impact. This knowledge is important, as it can help us plan for the future and focus our resources on the supporting the needs of researchers, the government and industry to tackle climate change.”
Heath Marks AAF’s Chief Executive Officer says “There is a great opportunity to provide richer reporting, impact tracking and usage statistics about NCRIS facilities through using trust and identity.
“The AAF is working with the national research infrastructure community to build a Trust and Identity Framework. As the national digital research infrastructure for trust and identity, we are here to support the community and provide expertise in the development of a coordinated approach across the NCRIS ecosystem.”
National research infrastructure’s impact revealed through trust and identity
As a national digital infrastructure and a trust and identity capability, the AAF is developing a Trust and Identity Framework to support Australia’s national research infrastructure and its users.
By partnering with ACCESS-NRI we are exploring the underpinnings for addressing the challenge for national research infrastructure, understanding the identity of users and report on usage across service and organisational boundaries.