Brazil harnesses space tech to monitor deforestation
by Catarina Chagas
Brazil will launch a satellite in 2011 to monitor deforestation and urban
expansion around the world, it has been announced.
AmazĂ´nia-1 will carry a UK-made high resolution camera. The United
Kingdom—Brazil collaboration was announced last week (14 July) at the 60th
Annual Meeting of the Brazilian Society for Progress in Science.
It is part of the continuing UK—Brazil Partnership in Science and
Innovation, and stems from discussions between governments and research
partners that began in 2007 during the UK—Brazil Year of Cooperation on
Science and Technology.
AmazĂ´nia-1 will orbit the Earth 14 times a day at a distance of 400
miles, collecting images of several countries. It will have three cameras in
total, two of them made in Brazil and one made in the UK.
The UK camera, RALCam 3, will be made by the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
based in Oxfordshire, and will provide images with each photo pixel showing
ten metres of actual terrain — a technology without precedent in a Brazilian
satellite.
The photos will aid environmental observation and inform natural resources
management. It will be easier, for example, to identify illegal activity in
forests, particularly in the Amazon and Congo rainforests, the two largest
in the world.
Other applications include mapping of remote areas, and coastal and disaster
monitoring.
"A few weeks after the launch, the satellite will start sending
information," Thyrson Villela, director for satellites and applications at
the Brazilian Space Agency, told SciDev.Net. The data will then be freely
available to Brazilian research centres and those in countries all over the
world. Having access to this information will help other tropical forest
countries to fight their environment issues.
According to the UK Department for International Development (DFID), this
project demonstrates the importance of science and scientific collaboration
to address major global issues. DFID aims to work with other countries to
build their capacity for satellite monitoring, drawing on Brazilian and UK
expertise in this area.
Amazania-1 is the first land monitoring satellite made entirely in Brazil.
Its launch will be the first at the new Brazilian multi-mission platform,
built by the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research. Both the
satellite and the platform are government-funded enterprises.
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