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Challenge Summary

Welcome to the Climate Resilience Data Idea Generation Challenge - EOSDIS/NASA Data Sources!

With growing climate risk, it is evermore necessary to grow innovative capacity for resilience and adaptation. Using open climate data, imagine the possibilities of new applications that could fuel climate resilience efforts for communities and ecosystems as well as empower people to make smart decisions for the future. NASA and USGS invite you to take a step toward resilience by imagining solutions to our planet’s complex climate risks.

Round 1

For Round 1, you are expected to submit your completed idea, including:
1. Abstract Paragraph
2. The “Why”
3. User Stories
4. Future enhancements/extensions for this application
5. Screenshots or Mockups

Round 2

For Round 2, you are expected to submit your completed idea again. At this point, you may have made changes to your idea, based on any feedback from the client (if applicable).


Project Background:
For an overview, check out the YouTube Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yUdTEXRZCg#t=148

Climate change has impacts on a global scale that are felt in our local communities. Whether it is coastal flooding that threatens lives and property, increased disruptions to agriculture, or ocean acidification hurting ecosystems, the risks have an impact on virtually every facet of our daily lives.

Historically, agencies like National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration  (NOAA), National Aeronautics and Space Agency  (NASA) and United States Geological Survey (USGS) have focused on developing world-class science data to support scientific research. With the rapid growth in the innovation community and the advent of big data, there are opportunities to encourage the wider community to apply novel thought and methods to unlock the potential of the data to address critical climate vulnerabilities.

The National Climate Assessment produced by more than 300 experts across government and academia has already identified the current and future climate vulnerabilities. We need tools that utilize big data to help our local communities improve climate resilience, save our ecosystems, and prepare for climate change. We have climate data that is free and accessible, but much of it is not available through web services.

That’s where you come in.

This ideation challenge is designed to understand what data infrastructure you need and how you would use that infrastructure to create impactful products. What would you do if you didn’t need to download code or data from NASA or USGS, but simply invoked functions over the web instead?  What kind of applications would that unlock? Which data sources would you use?

Recognizing the diversity of data across the United States Government and across the globe, the challenge is organized into three categories based on utilization of data sources:
NASA. Entries in this class include only NASA data sources. Example: NASA GIBS API,  NASA LANCE, etc.
U.S. Federal Government data. Entries may include
-- 
a single federal government dataset (e.g. USGS, NOAA, etc) excluding NASA data, or
-- 
a combination of two or more federal datasets including NASA data. containing any federal Example: USGS BISON  + NOAA NCDC storm events, USDA Cropland Data Layer + USGS Downscaled Climate Projections,  etc. For a list of suggested data sources, please refer to the Data Source section. You may include Federal data sources not listed in the sheet.
Open. Entries are based on data that did not originate from the US Federal Government, which may include universities, nonprofit organizations, international organizations or governments, and other sources that have not been specifically outlined above.

Your ideas can shape the development of systems and services to make innovation easier for climate resilience.


The National Climate Assessment (NCA) produced by more than 300 experts across government and academia has already identified the current and future climate vulnerabilities. We need tools that utilize big data to help our local communities improve climate resilience, save our ecosystems, and prepare for climate change. We have climate data that is free and accessible, but much of it is not available through web services.

Data Sources:
Data sources can be found in this sheet:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1THpspYCkhxHIXhq9nOTfT-YLQnxvHLu_sxxBxRPXNB0/edit
Note: For this challenge you can only use resources under NASA EOSDIS competition class. 

Ideas should address at least one of the vulnerabilities identified in the NCA. High-level regional vulnerabilities have been highlighted in the table below. Additional detail on NCA findings can be found here: http://nca2014.globalchange.gov/downloads

Organizing Your Submission:
Your submission should contain a detailed description of your idea. Preferably one document, with four (4) sections:

1. Abstract Paragraph – Describe your app in this paragraph!

2. The “Why” – Describe how your concept addresses a particular problem as specified in the NCA, targets a given audience, and specifies which data would be used.
Below is a summary of the NCA findings. To learn more about each one, please see the reports here.

Region

Summary of findings

Coasts

Coastal lifelines, such as water supply infrastructure and evacuation routes, are increasingly vulnerable to higher sea levels and storm surges, inland flooding, and other climate-related changes.

Great Plains

Rising temperatures lead to increased demand for water and energy and impacts on agricultural practices.

Hawai‘i and Pacific Islands

Increasingly constrained freshwater supplies, coupled with increased temperatures, stress both people and ecosystems and decrease food and water security.

Midwest

Longer growing seasons and rising carbon dioxide levels increase yields of some crops, although these benefits have already been offset in some instances by occurrence of extreme events such as heat waves, droughts, and floods.

Northeast

Communities are affected by heat waves, more extreme precipitation events, and coastal flooding due to sea level rise and storm surge.

Northwest

Changes in the timing of streamflow related to earlier snowmelt reduce the supply of water in summer, causing far-reaching ecological and socioeconomic consequences.

Oceans

The oceans are currently absorbing about a quarter of human-caused carbon dioxide emissions to the atmosphere and over 90% of the heat associated with global warming, leading to ocean acidification and the alteration of marine ecosystems.

Southeast and Caribbean

Decreased water availability, exacerbated by population growth and land-use change,causes increased competition for water. There are increased risks associated with extreme events such as hurricanes.

Southwest

Drought and increased warming foster wildfires and increased competition for scarce water resources for people and ecosystems.

Northeast

Heat waves, coastal flooding, and river flooding will pose a growing challenge to the region’s environmental, social, and economic systems. This will increase the vulnerability of the region’s residents, especially its most disadvantaged populations.

3. User Stories – Write 2 or more user stories/use cases for this application.

4. Future enhancements/extensions for this application

5. Screenshots or Mockups

Although there are no limit to number of submissions you can upload, you should only upload multiple submissions if each one is comprehensive and substantially different from your others. Within these constraints, you are free to describe any number of alternative approaches and extra features. In fact, we encourage you to do so. You can't have too many ideas!

As a reminder you can submit anything you think highlights your idea clearly.

The sky's the limit! Good luck!

Target Audience
The target audience will be the general public. 

Judging Criteria
Judging will be conducted by a panel of NASA and USGS experts and will focus on three criteria:
Relevance to the NCA. Experts from around the world have identified key climate vulnerabilities. This application should target at least one climate problem.
Clarity regarding specific data use. The application needs to be data driven. NASA and USGS want to know how specifically this data would be used to drive your idea. Extra consideration will be given to ideas that mashup multiple data sources to increase the utility of your application.
Innovative edge. Think big, think differently. Tell us what makes this application the next big thing.

Submission & Source Files:
Preview Image
Create your preview image as one (1) 1024x1024 JPG or PNG file in RGB color mode at 72dpi and place a screenshot of your submission within it.
- You can take screenshot of your idea document and submit it.
- You can provide a blank image file and use it as preview image.

Submission Files
All original source files of the submitted ideas; it can be PDF, HTML, DOC, TXT or RTF file.

Source Files
All original source files of the submitted ideas; it can be PDF, HTML, DOC, TXT or RTF file.

Final Fixes
As part of the final fixes phase you may be asked to complete one round of minor changes to ensure your submission meets the stated requirements of this challenge.

Please read the challenge specification carefully and watch the forums for any questions or feedback concerning this challenge. It is important that you monitor any updates provided by the client or Studio Admins in the forums. Please post any questions you might have for the client in the forums.

Stock Photography

Stock photography is not allowed in this challenge. All submitted elements must be designed solely by you. See this page for more details.

How To Submit

  • New to Studio? ‌Learn how to compete here
  • Upload your submission in three parts (Learn more here). Your design should be finalized and should contain only a single design concept (do not include multiple designs in a single submission).
  • If your submission wins, your source files must be correct and “Final Fixes” (if applicable) must be completed before payment can be released.
  • You may submit as many times as you'd like during the submission phase, but only the number of files listed above in the Submission Limit that you rank the highest will be considered. You can change the order of your submissions at any time during the submission phase. If you make revisions to your design, please delete submissions you are replacing.

Winner Selection

Submissions are viewable to the client as they are entered into the challenge. Winners are selected by the client and are chosen solely at the client's discretion.

Challenge links

Screening Scorecard

Submission format

Your Design Files:

  1. Look for instructions in this challenge regarding what files to provide.
  2. Place your submission files into a "Submission.zip" file.
  3. Place all of your source files into a "Source.zip" file.
  4. Declare your fonts, stock photos, and icons in a "Declaration.txt" file.
  5. Create a JPG preview file.
  6. Place the 4 files you just created into a single zip file. This will be what you upload.

Trouble formatting your submission or want to learn more? ‌Read the FAQ.

Fonts, Stock Photos, and Icons:

All fonts, stock photos, and icons within your design must be declared when you submit. DO NOT include any 3rd party files in your submission or source files. Read about the policy.

Screening:

All submissions are screened for eligibility before the challenge holder picks winners. Don't let your hard work go to waste. Learn more about how to  pass screening.

Challenge links

Questions? ‌Ask in the Challenge Discussion Forums.

Source files

  • PDF file
  • HTML
  • DOC
  • TXT
  • RTF

You must include all source files with your submission.

Submission limit

5 submissions

ID: 30047804