Ocean Salinity Conference 2022

Beach with blue ocean and blue sky with clouds
Conference
Jun. 6 to Jun. 9, 2022

6:00 pm MDT

Columbia University, New York, NY
Main content

The planning of the Ocean Salinity Conference (6-9 June 2022) is moving forward, with the conference being planned an in-person event with an option for virtual participation. In-person participants are required to show proof of vaccination for any COVID-19 vaccine listed by the World Health Organization.

Ocean salinity is a critical variable that drives ocean circulation, influences marine biogeochemistry, and regulates air-sea interaction. It is also an important parameter for studying the changing water and carbon cycles as well as the cryosphere of the Earth. Significant advancements have been made in recent years in the development of an ocean salinity observing system both through in-situ and satellite technologies. The resultant ocean salinity measurements have broadened and deepened the knowledge of ocean salinity’s role in ocean dynamics and its linkages with the water cycle and climate.

Meeting Goals

The conference aims to foster scientific exchanges and collaborations in the broad community involved in ocean salinity science, applications, technology development, product services, and community building. This conference, postponed from 2021 to 2022, is part of a series of international salinity community meetings (Brest, France - 2013, Exeter, UK - 2014, Hamburg, Germany - 2015, Falmouth/MA, USA - 2017, and Paris, France - 2018). The conference presentations and discussion will review recent progress, identify knowledge and capability gaps, and chart the way forward to sustain and enhance the ocean salinity observing system as well as to maximize the value of the resulting measurements.

The main topics of the conference include:

  1. Salinity variability and the underlying physical processes
  2. Salinity’s roles in ocean circulation, weather, and climate
  3. Linkages with the water cycle (including land-sea linkage)
  4. Salinity observing system (both in-situ and satellite)
  5. Evaluation and improvement of satellite salinity measurement
  6. Constraining models and improving forecasts
  7. Biogeochemical applications

Program

See the Program (updated May 23, 2022)

Invited Speakers

See the list of invited speakers

Format

In addition to in-person oral and poster presentations, the conference will virtual platforms for remote oral and poster presentations.

Scientific organizing committee

Tong Lee, NASA JPL, USA

Aida Alvera Azcarate, University of Liège, Belgium

Eric Bayler, NOAA, USA

Frederick Bingham, University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA

Jacqueline Boutin, Sorbonne University, France

Kyla Drushka, University of Washington, USA

Paul Durack, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, USA

Arnold Gordon, Columbia University, USA (Local Host)

Eric Hackert, NASA GSFC, USA

Simon Josey, National Oceanography Centre, UK

Matthew Martin, UK Met Office, UK

Elisabeth Remy, Mercator-Ocean, France

Nicolas Reul, IFREMER, France

Gilles Reverdin, Sorbonne University, France

Roberto Sabia, Telespazio-Vega/ESA, EU

Klaus Scipal, ESA, EU

Julian Schanze, Earth and Space Research, USA

Antonio Turiel, Institute of Marine Sciences, Spain

Nadya Vinogradova Shiffer, NASA HQ, USA

Sponsor organizations

NASA

NOAA

US CLIVAR

Columbia University

Intellectual Sponsors

European Space Agency

CLIVAR (Climate and Ocean - Variability, Predictability and Change)

Qustions?

Contact Maggie Costley, Event Planner.