Abstract

This manuscript discusses the key characteristics of the Digital Ecosystems (DEs) model, which, we argue, is particularly appropriate for connecting and orchestrating the many heterogeneous and autonomous online systems, infrastructures, and platforms that constitute the bedrock of a digitally transformed society. Big Data and AI systems have enabled the implementation of the Digital Twin paradigm (introduced first in the manufacturing sector) in all the sectors of society. DEs promise to be a flexible and operative framework that allow the development of local, national, and international Digital Twins. In particular, the “Digital Twins of the Earth” may generate the actionable intelligence that is necessary to address global change challenges, facilitate the European Green transition, and contribute to realizing the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) agenda. The case of the Destination Earth initiative and system is discussed in the manuscript as an example to address the broader DE concepts. In respect to the more traditional data and information infrastructural philosophy, DE solutions present important advantages as to flexibility and viability. However, designing and implementing an effective collaborative DE is far more difficult than a traditional digital system. DEs require the definition and the governance of a metasystemic level, which is not necessary for a traditional information system. The manuscript discusses the principles, patterns, and architectural viewpoints characterizing a thriving DE supporting the generation and operation of “Digital Twins of the Earth”. The conclusions present a set of conditions, best practices, and base capabilities for building a knowledge framework, which makes use of the Digital Twin paradigm and the DE approach to support decision makers with the SDG agenda implementation.

Highlights

  • Key Challenges for HumankindSociety today is facing unprecedented global environmental challenges in terms of food, water and energy security, resilience to natural hazards, population growth and migrations, pandemics of infectious diseases, sustainability of natural ecosystem services, poverty, and the development of a sustainable economy

  • Humankind is called to face unprecedented challenges to try and preserve our planet and achieve a more sustainable and just society. This is primarily a political challenge, but needs to be supported by a sound and robust multi-disciplinary knowledge platform that can provide the scientific evidence required by policy and decision makers based on environmental observation from remote-sensing and in-situ measurements

  • To study the disrupting effect of applying both these archetypes to Global Change and sustainable development, a new scientific discipline was proposed: Big Earth Data (BED) science. This new discipline can leverage the emergence of Digital Twins of the Earth, seen as living digital simulation models that update and change as their physical counterparts change

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Summary

Key Challenges for Humankind

Society today is facing unprecedented global environmental challenges in terms of food, water and energy security, resilience to natural hazards, population growth and migrations, pandemics of infectious diseases, sustainability of natural ecosystem services, poverty, and the development of a sustainable economy. UN Member States decided to launch a process to develop a set of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) This process had broad participation from major groups and other civil society stakeholders. The implementation of the SDGs agenda requires a significant effort in collecting, analyzing, and sharing relevant information worldwide For this purpose, the UN calls for the development of a distributed and international knowledge platform to facilitate multi-stakeholder collaboration and partnerships, sharing information, best practices, and policy advice among the United Nations Member States, civil society, the private sector, the scientific community, and other stakeholders [4]. This novel paradigm is discussed from different perspectives (i.e., viewpoints that address the diverse concerns of different stakeholders) in the central part of the paper. The comprehensive discussion of the multiple dimensions and challenges of digital ecosystems presented in this paper fills an important gap in the current knowledge and marks the path for future developments and implementations

Shifting Paradigms in a Digitally Transformed Society
Conceptual
Digital
The Destination Earth Knowledge Framework and the Green Deal Data Space
Framework Main Requirements and Constraints
The Digital Ecosystem Nature of the Dynamic Knowledge Framework
Principles and Patterns for a Thriving Digital Ecosystem
Emergent Behavior of a Digital Ecosystem as a Whole
Digital Ecosystem Information View
Digital Ecosystem Functional Sub-Systems
Multi-Cloud Approach and Virtual Cloud Paradigm
HPC-as-a-Service
Digital Ecosystem Virtual Cloud Layer and Orchestration Services
Client
Virtual Cloud Middleware
Developed Prototypes
GAIA-X Initiative
Findings
10. Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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