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Dr Alex Held

Dr Alex Held, who leads CSIRO's Office of Space Science and Applications.

Monitoring Asia-Pacific disasters from space

Reference: 08/13

A space-based international Earth observation network to detect and monitor natural disasters in the Asia-Pacific region has been formed with a substantial contribution from Australian science.

  • 5 February 2008

Called Sentinel Asia, the network of information-delivery websites has its roots in the Australian bushfire tracking system, Sentinel Hotspots, which was developed in 2002 by CSIRO, Geoscience Australia and the Australian Defence Imagery and Geospatial Organisation.

“This will be a critical information delivery system on wildfires, flooding, drought, and landslides in our region, where those events can be seen by Earth observing satellites in real time,” says the coordinator of Australia’s input, senior CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research scientist Dr Alex Held.

“Australia has had a pivotal, strategic role in developing the system which has the potential to benefit billions of people in our region by assisting authorities in a recovery response,” he said. “The concept of Sentinel Asia is to provide online information from Earth observation satellites in ‘near real-time’ through a network of webGIS services such as the Australian Sentinel Hotspots system.”

“This will be a critical information delivery system on wildfires, flooding, drought, and landslides in our region, where those events can be seen by Earth observing satellites in real time,”
says the coordinator of Australia’s input, senior CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research scientist Dr Alex Held.

Initially supported by the Japanese Government through the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Sentinel Asia aims to show the value of Earth observation data for disaster management in the region. The system has been activated 10 times by seven countries including Australia in the last 12 months, mostly in response to earthquakes and floods. Planned improvements include further nodes in other countries, use of high bandwidth communications satellites to provide information more quickly, and access to a wider range of Earth observation satellites.

Dr Held said many of the causes and impacts of natural disasters, including droughts, are observable, often in real-time, from space by orbiting or geostationary Earth observing systems.  “When efficiently combined with modern information-distribution methods, this data can be sent rapidly to affected communities and local emergency agencies in some cases as early-warning before the disaster occurs, or as post-disaster maps, to assist in recovery operations,” he said.

The system largely uses free-to-air satellite imagery produced by Earth-observing satellites operated by the US, Europe, Japan, India and, in the future, other countries in Australasia which are planning satellite launches.

Download image at: Monitoring Asia-Pacific disasters from space.

Read more media releases in our Media section.

Fast facts

  • Called Sentinel Asia, the network of information-delivery websites has its roots in the Australian bushfire tracking system, Sentinel Hotspots, which was developed in 2002 by CSIRO, Geoscience Australia and the Australian Defence Imagery and Geospatial Organisation
  • This will be a critical information delivery system on wildfires, flooding, drought, and landslides in our region, where those events can be seen by Earth observing satellites in real time
  • Australia has had a pivotal, strategic role in developing the system which has the potential to benefit billions of people in our region by assisting authorities in a recovery response

Contact Information

Dr Alex Held (BSC MSC PHD)

Head of COSSA

CSIRO Office of Space Science & Applications

Phone: 61 2 6246 5718

Email: Alex.Held@csiro.au

Mr Bill Stephens

Media Liaison Officer

CSIRO Media Liaison

Phone: 61 2 6276 6152

Alt Phone: 0408 817 066

Email: Bill.Stephens@csiro.au

Dr Simon Torok

Communication Manager

CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research

Phone: 61 3 9239 4645

Alt Phone: 61 409 844 302

Email: Simon.Torok@csiro.au

Explore CSIRO

Community

CSIRO aims to establish and build relationships with members of the community. We welcome people of all ages to come and explore our facilities, holiday programs and public events.

Contact

Phone:

1300 363 400

Email:

enquiries@csiro.au

More contact options

About CSIRO

CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, is Australia's national science agency and one of the largest and most diverse research agencies in the world.

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