Director's Welcome
The Science and Technology Center for Coastal Margin Observation & Prediction (CMOP) is about opportunity. The opportunity to address important national priorities in ocean policy. The opportunity to conduct exciting new research and develop novel technologies. The opportunity for students to have access to science and technology. And the opportunity to rally the Pacific Northwest behind an exciting vision for economic development that supports local and regional economies.
For the next decade, the CMOP mission calls for the study of coastal margins, using "space-age like" technologies to facilitate the long-term, integrated description and analysis of coastal-margin physics, chemistry, and biology and to enable an understanding of river-to-ocean ecosystems that will transform our conceptions of integrative science and our visions of how such science can impact local and regional economies. We take on these challenges with gusto.
As one of the less than 20 Science and Technology Centers of the National Science Foundation (NSF), we are asked to achieve more than advances in science and technology. Indeed, it is incumbent upon us to help change paradigms in education, in diversity, and in societal uses of science and technology. A tall order! Over the next few years, CMOP will also strategically address apparently unconnected but in reality truly intertwined issues such as: lifelong education pipelines; science, technology, engineering and math literacy of society in general and underrepresented minorities in particular; university-industry partnerships for economic development; and university-government-NGO partnerships for environmental conflict resolution.
CMOP would not have been possible without the joining of forces of its three lead institutions: Oregon Health & Science University, Oregon State University, and the University of Washington. The combined strength of these universities is truly awesome. For the success of CMOP as a transformative agent of science, education and society, however, we need to create an even broader science-society partnership. The opportunity for such a partnership to be a decisive agent necessary sweeping changes in ocean policy - see the Pew Ocean Commission, the Ocean Blueprint for the 21st Century, and the Joint Ocean Commission - is just too large to miss.
We work with industries like Intel and WET labs, government agencies like DOGAMI and NOAA, peer university groups in Oregon, Utah and Maryland, the Saturday Academy K-12 enrichment programs, as well visionary individuals at the Institute for Tribal Government and at Corbett High School. They add much to the core OHSU-OSU-UW partnership.
Whether you represent the interests of academia, government, tribes, economic or environmental interests, or are simply fascinated by the ocean or related science, education or diversity issues, please consider joining us in making CMOP a truly transformative resource for the region and the country.
President Kennedy said "Space is there, and we're going to climb it, and the moon and the planets are there, and new hopes for knowledge and peace are there. And, therefore, [...] we set sail [...]". Our rivers, estuaries and coasts are much closer than the moon, but the sailing will be as challenging and - we strongly believe - even more rewarding!
Antonio M. Baptista, Ph.D.
Director, Science and Technology Center for
Coastal Margin Observation & Prediction

