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Satellites Are Tracking Europe's Forest Fire Scars

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Brussels (SPX) Aug 17, 2004
Last year's long hot summer was a bumper year for forest fires, with more than half a million hectares of woodland destroyed across Mediterranean Europe. So far this year fresh fires have occurred across Portugal, Spain and southern France, with 2500 people evacuated from blazes in foothills north of Marseille.

According to the European Commission, each hectare of forest (1 hectare = 2.5 acres) lost to fire costs Europe's economy between a 1,000 and 5,000 Euros. The distinctive 'burn scars' left across the land by forest fires can be identified from space as a specific spectral signature from optical sensors in the short wavelength infrared, near infrared and visible channels.

A new Earth Observation-based service is employing satellite imagery from SPOT and Landsat to automatically detect the 2004 burn scars within fire-prone areas of Southwest France, within the Puglia and Marche regions of Italy and across the full territory of Spain.

Burn scar detection is planned to take place on a seasonal basis, identifying fires covering at least one hectare to a standard resolution of 30 metres, with detailed damage assessment available to a maximum resolution of 2.5 metres using the SPOT 5 satellite.

Having been validated and geo-referenced, burn scar maps can then be easily merged with other relevant geographical detail in order to help identify correlations and decide where preventative measures should be prioritised.

At the end of the risk mapping process, the probability of fire breaking out in a particular place and time can be reliably calculated. The Risk-EOS burn scar mapping service began last year.

The intention is to develop further fire-related services by the end of 2007, including daily risk maps combining EO with meteorological and vegetation data. Another planned service will identify 'hot spots' during fires, and map fire events twice a day, permitting an overall assessment of its development and the damage being done.

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SMART-1 Progresses Towards The Moon
Paris (ESA) Aug 17, 2004
SMART-1 is now into its 321st orbit, in good status and with all functions performing nominally. The current thrusting strategy is progressing well and one of the longest thrust arcs took place on 9 August at 22:14 for 56.7 hours.







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