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The brave new world of modeling
and simulation
Emerging industry may mean Hampton
Roads from its dependence on military spending
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by Lisa
Antonelli Bacon
for Virginia Business
May 2006 Imagine that a hurricane is headed for the Virginia
coast. It's a monster, with pounding winds of more than
100 miles per hour. Populous Hampton Roads sits right
in its path. With the specter of Katrina branded in their
minds, emergency planners decide to evacuate the area's
1.6 million people. Instead of chaos, they expect an
orderly exodus because in the works is a plan on who
should leave first, which roads will carry how much traffic
and how long it will take to clear the region. This what-if
scenario is being played, again and again, in the risk-free,
cost efficient world of modeling and simulation.
Used for years by the American military
to plan war games, M&S technology has evolved to the critical point
where it has the power to revolutionize industries. Take
health care. Medical students traditionally learn procedures
under the old maxim “watch one, do one, teach one.” Yet
these days students at Eastern Virginia Medical School
in Norfolk use desktop surgical simulators to snip,
suction and sew their way through virtual surgeries.
Meanwhile,
research scientists at Old Dominion University’s
Computerized Automatic Virtual Environment (CAVE) are
developing a program to create a virtual operating room,
equipped with a virtual surgical team that can engage
in dialogue for consultation and assistance. If practice
makes perfect, then modeling and simulation has the potential
to drive down health care costs by reducing the number
of malpractice suits. “Imagine if we could roll
out a model health care system, and we didn’t have
to figure in litigation costs?” says U.S Rep. J.
Randy Forbes, R-4th.
If that sounds like so much pie in
the sky, you’ll
have to forgive Forbes, chairman of the Congressional
Modeling & Simulation Caucus, the group charged with
developing the M&S industry and its uses in government.
It’s just that he sees great potential for the
many uses of M&S in his Southeastern district,
which includes some of military-dependent Hampton Roads.
Indeed, the capacity to change lives
or direct history through modeling and simulation grows
exponentially every
day. Local, state and national governments already
are relying on M&S to craft emergency plans to minimize
the impact of large scale catastrophes, such as a Katrina-sized
hurricane, or a possible avian flu epidemic. The implications
of the spread of a flu virus from birds to humans are
huge, in terms of both health and the economy. Early
this year, in reaction to the avian flu threat, Italy’s
poultry consumption dove 70 percent. In America, M&S
enables scientists to plot possible scenarios and responses
that would help safeguard poultry and people. “With
modeling and simulation, we know what’s going to
happen; we know how to train people. We know what we
need to do and how it’s going to unfold,” says
Forbes.
In Hampton Roads, proposed base closures
threaten to dent the region’s military-based economy.
Plus the area is losing a major employer. Ford Motor
Co. announced
last month that it will close Norfolk’s truck
assembly plant in 2008, which employs about 2,500 workers
(see
story). Fortunately, the port is going great
guns, and local government and economic development
leaders are looking to M&S as another way to expand
the area’s
economy and draw investment from around the world.
Already, the region is acknowledged as one of the country’s
top three spots for the emerging M&S industry,
along with Huntsville, Ala., and Orlando, Fla. Since
1997,
when ODU established the Virginia Modeling, Analysis
and Simulation Center (VMASC) in northern Suffolk (joining
the Department of Defense’s Joint Warfighting
Center there) the area has attracted a cluster of small-
and
medium-size companies, defense contractors and academic
entities, leading some to refer to it as “Sim
City.”
ODU’s center has outgrown its current home and
plans to relocate next year to larger digs about two
miles down the road. Going up is an $11.6 million building
in a 32-acre, mixed-use office park that straddles the
Suffolk-Portsmouth line near Interstate 664. Other signs
the industry is gaining traction: The state may kick
in as much as $27 million to help grow M&S in Virginia.
Companies continue to invest in facilities near the VMASC,
with Raytheon Co. planning to build a 22,000-square-foot
simulation lab. Plus, since awarding the country’s
first doctoral degree in modeling and simulation in 2003,
ODU is enrolling more students on the M&S track. “Old Dominion University plans
to double the number of students in master's and doctoral
programs in modeling
and simulation,” says ODU President Roseann Runte.
The expansion will promote applications of modeling and
simulation in such areas as medicine, serious gaming,
transportation and maritime supply and logistics. “The
research activity and academic offerings will contribute
to significant job generation for the region and the
commonwealth.”
Yet for all its potential, modeling
and simulation has yet to become common parlance. Far
from it. In March,
California transportation officials tested safety devices
by driving a locomotive into a commuter train full
of dummies. It was the eighth such test. Modeling and
simulation
could have performed the same test 100 times at no
risk, a sliver of the cost and no cleanup. In fact, say
proponents,
that’s the beauty of replicating real-life scenarios
with computer technology: It provides training, visualization
and experience, and possibilities are limited only by
the imagination. “M&S, once regarded as a military-driven
industry, is exploding,” says Forbes.
Like any high tech industry, myriad
uses for M&S
are developing at the speed of light. And while the Department
of Defense has been its biggest consumer up to this point,
private companies are beginning to employ the technology
to reduce costs, improve skills and change the way they
do business. For instance, Coldstone Creamery and Cisco
Systems have adopted instructional gaming (also called “serious
gaming”) to train employees. And Canon Inc. is
rolling out almost a dozen new instructional games
to train its repair technicians. Industry experts project
the instructional games market alone will reach $100
million in the next five years.
Slowly, word is getting out, not just
about M&S,
but also about Hampton Roads. More than 300 government
officials, academics and industry representatives from
24 states met in Suffolk this past winter at the country’s
first Modeling and Simulation Leadership Summit. They
discussed the challenges of growing the industry and
developed an agenda to take to Washington.
The state has already felt a groundswell.
In 2004, M&S
generated $24 million in state revenue. That amount is
expected to grow to grow 125 percent by 2009. By some
estimates, the industry already pumps more than $400
million a year into the Hampton Roads’ economy
and has created more than 4,000 jobs with salaries twice
the local average of $32,000. And that’s just the
beginning. “By 2009, the number of jobs in modeling
and simulation here will grow to 7,000,” says Robert
Sharak, special projects director for the Hampton Roads
Partnership. By that time, economic development officials
say, the area M&S industry as a whole will balloon
to nearly $1 billion.
Besides becoming a major driver of
the state’s
economy, M&S could shift the region’s centuries-long
reliance on military spending. In Hampton Roads, economic
growth has long been tied to the ups and downs of defense
spending. After 9/11, a ramp-up in defense spending
and homeland security helped boost the area’s
economy for several years. Yet, prospects don’t
look good for the near future. There has been talk
of moving one
of Hampton Roads’ nuclear aircraft carriers to
Mayport, Fla., which would cost the area’s economy
more than 5,000 jobs and $188 million in wages and
benefits. Plus, the federal Base and Realignment Commission
is
threatening to close Oceana Naval Air Station in Virginia
Beach (see story) if certain restrictions
on encroaching development aren’t met. Therefore,
a surge in a new industry is a welcome development.
So far, competition in the M&S field is scarce but
serious. Orlando has been cultivating a skilled work
force for decades. Its modeling and simulation work force
of 64,000 far outstrips Virginia’s 4,000. But proposed
state funding along with a private buy-in could lock
in Hampton Roads as a national M&S center.
In addition to modeling and simulation, the port of Hampton
Roads continues to be a powerful growth engine for the
region and the state. For nearly 400 years, explorers
and sailors, fishermen and traders have navigated the
stretch of water at the confluence of the James River
and the Chesapeake Bay. Today, city-sized warships, towering
oil freighters and container barges ply the waters of
Hampton Roads, connecting Virginia to world commerce.
The Virginia Port Authority (VPA) is positioning itself
to overtake New York as the busiest port on the East
Coast, with major upgrades, private investment and improved
ground transportation options.
To meet the needs of an expanding global
market, sparked largely by trade with China, the port
authority has invested
more than $300 million in equipment and cranes to handle
more and bigger cargo. The commitment spurred major
investments from private industry, including a $450 million
marine
terminal for Maersk Sealand, one of the world’s
largest shipping lines, owned by Danish conglomerate
A.P. Moller Group.
But while the ocean seems infinite, terminal space is
not. According to the VPA, Hampton Roads will outgrow
its capacity for container cargo in just six years. Earlier
this year, after months of considering issues such as
the impact on area wetlands, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
cleared the way for construction of a marine terminal
on Craney Island, a 600-acre expanse of sand and earth
dredged from nearby harbors. Cost estimates for such
a transformation range from hundreds of millions to billions
of dollars, which could call for private-sector investment.
Further challenging the ports’ speed
of growth are clogged transportation routes. For years,
ongoing
roadwork on I-64 near the Hampton Roads Tunnel has
snarled traffic, threatening timely delivery of goods
to and
from the ports. The port authority continues to press
for a third crossing to ease traffic flow and provide
more direct routes to international terminals. But
even if construction of a third crossing were under way,
it
would take years to complete. Meanwhile, the Port of
New York and New Jersey continues to upgrade, and Savannah
adds more and more distribution centers to welcome
imports to its port.
Just a few miles from the ports, M&S
specialists at the not-for-profit VMASC center are hard
at work on
projects in another growth area for Virginia, homeland
security. For nearly a decade, scientists have been
quietly testing, researching, developing and simulating
events
to provide solutions for situations ranging from combat
to health care, from transportation to job and professional
training. In fiscal 2004, the center kept its staff
of 50 busy with more than $10 million in research contracts
with partners in academia, government and industry.
Even before VMASC, the region enjoyed
a sort of covert reputation as a national center for
M&S. Long before
people bought their first video joystick, the military
was acting out the finer points of armed engagement on
video screens. The U.S. Joint Forces Command center in
Suffolk uses psychologically-based behavior models to
not only predict, but also show developing crowd behavior
in specific military scenarios. Nearby, Suffolk plans
to use the technology to update the city’s master
plan for growth. And modeling and simulation will also
play a role in planning for the area’s third crossing. “We
want to move M&S into as many areas as we can,” says
Roland Mielke, VMASC’s interim executive director.
As private industry awakens to its
ever-expanding uses, M&S is growing in pockets, bringing more jobs and
tax revenues. Vienna-based C2 Technologies Inc. is doubling
its Hampton Roads staff after winning a $346 million
contract to develop M&S programs to craft training
and combat policy for the Army. Lockheed Martin has opened
a $35 million Center for Innovation in Suffolk, where
Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics have begun their
own efforts to capture some of the military’s M&S
contracts. And, in a public-private partnership, 17 companies
are working with the commonwealth to establish the Emergency
Management Training, Analysis & Simulation Center.
In the rapidly evolving world of IT,
technical skills can become outdated almost as quickly
as a pint of milk.
If M&S continues to metastasize at its present rate,
the current work force won’t be able to meet the
demand for skilled employees. In the past, students seeking
a career had to cobble together courses and work-study
programs to gain the necessary skills. ODU now offers
full curricula for graduate degrees in M&S. Starting
this fall, Tidewater Community College will offer associate
degrees in M&S. Late last year, Suffolk agreed to
buy 57 acres at TCC in hopes of attracting and fostering
collaboration with more M&S concerns. Focused on
doubling research efforts, as well as developing and
filling graduate programs in area colleges, part of
the proposed state funding is earmarked to develop
the education
needed to build a skilled work force in time to meet
demand.
Meanwhile, the rest of the world isn’t standing
by. By 2008, India will have turned out another 100,000
high-tech engineers. China will have added another 300,000
to its skilled work force. Without planning and funding,
the United States will be just an also-ran in the IT
economy. “If we don’t want to stagnate, we
need to do this to maintain our technical edge,” says
Forbes. “We have all the ingredients here to turn
the area into a modeling and simulation hothouse. The
key isn’t what we’re doing today, but what
we’ll be able to do tomorrow and the day after
tomorrow.”
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