Microsoft, USACE partner to develop coastal storm modeling

The government and business entities plan to improve their costal storm modeling system to scale for the entire North Atlantic under climate change conditions
July 16, 2021
3 min read

The U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) recently announced the next goals of its new agreement with the Microsoft Corporation: a costal storm modeling system that can scale for the entire North Atlantic under climate change conditions. The collaboration is, generally, aimed at delivering improved climate modeling and natural disaster resilience through predictive data, internet and AI-based services.

The agreement seeks to demonstrate the scalability of the code of ERDC’s premier coastal storm modeling system, CSTORM-MS, inside Microsoft’s Azure Government, a cloud computing service for building, testing, deploying and managing applications and services through Microsoft-managed data centers specifically for the U.S. Government. CSTORM-MS is a comprehensive integrated system of highly skilled and highly resolved models used to simulate coastal storms. The models provide for a robust, standardized approach to establishing the risk of coastal communities to future occurrences of storm events and for evaluating flood risk reduction measures. With its physics-based modeling capabilities, CSTORM-MS integrates a suite of high-fidelity storm modeling tools to support a wide range of coastal engineering needs for simulating tropical and extra-tropical storms, as well as wind, wave and water levels.

Currently, CSTORM-MS models are run at ERDC’s Department of Defense Supercomputing Resource Center, one of the DoD High Performance Modernization Program’s (HPCMP) supercomputing centers. In 2020, ERDC and the HPCMP performed a commercial cloud for high-performance computing workload assessment. This initial testing included a feasibility study of the CSTORM-MS models, and was successfully conducted using Microsoft’s Azure cloud.

Through the Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) between ERDC and Microsoft, two goals have been set for this second phase of the project:

  • To demonstrate scalability of the CSTORM-MS code on Azure through running the entire North Atlantic Coast storm suite with a sea level rise value not previously simulated; and
  • To create an opportunity for researchers to use the model results and replicate the workflow on their affected coastlines.

Microsoft’s participation in this effort stems from their Microsoft AI for Earth, a working group within Microsoft established in June 2017 that provides cloud-based tools and AI services to organizations working to protect the planet across five key areas: agriculture, biodiversity, conservation, climate change and water. AI for Earth awards grants to support projects that use AI to change the way people and organizations monitor, model and manage Earth's natural systems.

The CRADA between ERDC and Microsoft is made possible through the Federal Technology Transfer Act of 1986. The act provides that federal laboratories’ developments, such as those of ERDC, should be made accessible to private industry and state and local governments for the purpose of improving the economic, environmental and social well-being of the United States by stimulating the use of federally funded technology developments or capabilities.

SOURCE: U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center

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