This page has moved from: http:/www.stfc.ac.uk/PMC/PRel/STFC/GridNewOrg.aspx. Please update your bookmark - thank you.

New organisation to coordinate European scientific computing grids

A new organisation that will support the sustainable future development of leading-edge, collaborative scientific computing has been established following the signing of legal documents in Amsterdam.

STFC's Director of e-Science Dr Neil Geddes is pictured signing the legal documents which created EGI.eu
STFC's Director of e-Science Dr Neil Geddes is pictured signing the legal documents which created EGI.eu
Credit: EGI

The European Grid Initiative (link opens in a new window) (EGI.eu) will coordinate a European-wide grid computing infrastructure on behalf of its participants (national and community specific resource providers) that will enable scientists across the continent to share their computers to carry out the very best collaborative research projects within Europe and internationally.

Grid computing ‘connects’ computers that are scattered over a wide geographic area, allowing their computer power, data, instruments and storage space to be shared regardless of their location. It enables the resources of thousands of different computers hosted in university departments and data centres, national facilities, and even desktop PCs, to be combined to create a computing resource capable of making significant breakthroughs in data-intensive scientific research. Grid computing will enable scientists exploring what happened after the big bang at the Large Hadron Collider in CERN to analyse the equivalent of 20,000,000 CDs of data (15 petabytes), which is expected to be generated each year, much more quickly by distributing the workload across a grid.

EGI.eu was formally created in Dutch law on 8 February 2010 following the signing of legal documents by its Executive Board, made up of seven representatives elected by the EGI Council, including the UK’s EGI Council representative and Director of STFC's e-Science department Dr Neil Geddes.

The European Commission has funded a series of projects which have integrated grid computing facilities across the continent. This started with the European Data Grid, which was then followed by three projects, Enabling Grids for E-sciencE (link opens in a new window) (EGEE), all coordinated by CERN. The most recent, EGEE-III, is due to end in April 2010, and the EGI.eu has been designed and established as a permanent and sustainable approach to ensuring abundant, high-quality computing support for the European and global research community for many years to come.

STFC’s Director of e-Science Dr Neil Geddes said: “Grid computing is already having an incredible impact on how scientists are carrying out research into highly complex problems. Scientists from five countries, used grid-powered software to screen over 80,000 drug-like molecules an hour for their ability to disable a crucial malaria protein. In just ten weeks, the WISDOM (link opens in a new window)project completed the equivalent of 420 years of work, producing a shortlist of just 30 promising drug leads. Using grid computing to find potential solutions before going into the laboratory means that precious time and physical resources can be saved, potentially leading to cures and treatments to diseases much more quickly.”

“The creation of EGI.eu and continued development of a European-wide infrastructure for grid-computing will enable researchers across the continent to make the next leap in world-leading science.”

Dr Bob Jones, EGEE Director said: “It is great to see this sustainable, distributed computing infrastructure for researchers in Europe being established and it is a fitting culmination of the work of EGEE and the many collaborating projects.”

Dr Steven Newhouse, interim EGI Director continued "The pioneering work from the EGEE and other projects have shown how an infrastructure originally conceived over a decade ago to support High Energy Physics is now a generic e-infrastructure that supports over 13,000 scientists across many different disciplines. The core software and operational tools have been refined over the last 6 or more years to become increasingly stable and secure – and all available under a business friendly open-source license for deployment within private organisations, or as a basis for further technology exploitation."

EGI.eu will not own or operate any computers, but will co-ordinate clusters of computers in more than 50 countries through national centres called National Grid Initiatives (NGI). The UK’s NGI is coordinated by STFC’s e-Science department at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and is made up of the National Grid Service (link opens in a new window) funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and the Joint Information Systems Committee, JISC and the GridPP project funded by STFC.

Together, the NGIs and EGI.eu will direct the progress, operations, maintenance and sustainability of the EGI infrastructure. EGI.eu will be responsible for provision of essential services, such as security, coordination of user support, software commissioning, and monitoring and accounting for resource use.


Notes to editors

EGI.eu was created as a foundation established under Dutch law. It is planned to change the legal status of the EGI from a foundation into an ERIC (European Research Infrastructure Consortium) once the procedures to create an ERIC are well established by the European Commission.

An ERIC can benefit from exemptions from VAT and excise duty in all EU Member States. An ERIC is a legal entity based on EU law (Article 171 of the EC Treaty), which is reserved for the purpose of establishing and operating a research infrastructure.

The EGI will be funded by the 36 member states of the EGI Council, and initially it is expected to have funding from the European Commission through the proposed EGI-InSPIRE to cover the transfer of responsibilities from the EGEE-III project.

More information is available from the Enabling Grids for E-Science (link opens in a new window) and the European Grid Initiative (link opens in a new window) websites.

More details on the EGI-InSPIRE project will be presented at the 5th EGEE User Forum (link opens in a new window), 12-15 April in Uppsala, Sweden.

The UK National Grid Service (NGS) is the UK e-Science Grid and includes computing and data storage resources at 22 collaborating institutions. Together these institutions provide integrated computing support to an increasingly wide range of UK researchers. Further information can be found on the NGS website (link opens in a new window).

The WISDOM project ran from 2005 to 2007. For more information visit the WISDOM website (link opens in a new window).

Images available

STFC’s Director of e-Science Dr Neil Geddes is pictured signing the legal documents which created EGI.eu

Contacts

  • Karen Coles
    STFC Press Officer
    Tel: +44 (0)1925 603 708

  • Michael Wilson
    STFC e-Science
    Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
    Tel: +44 (0)1235 446 619

  • Steven Newhouse
    Stichting European Grid Initiative
    105 Science Park
    1098 XG
    Amsterdam
    The Netherlands
    Tel: +31 (0)20 592 5016

  • Neasan O’Neill
    EGEE Press and Events Manager
    Queen Mary, University of London
    Tel: +44 (0)79 6281 8712

About STFC

Page last updated: 02 March 2010 by Karen Lee