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One Planet, Many People is intended for environmental policy makers,
non-governmental organizations, the private sector, academics, teachers
and citizens.

One Planet, Many People is intended for environmental policy
makers, non-governmental organizations, the private sector, academics,
teachers and citizens. This colorful and approachable atlas contains
photographs, satellite images, maps and narratives that provide
insights into the many ways people around the world have changed, and
continue to change, the environment.

Objectives

The main purpose of this hard-cover,
332-page, large-format atlas is to document visual evidence of global
environmental changes resulting from natural processes and
human-induced activities. Special objectives of One Planet, Many People
include:

  1. generating awareness of human interactions with the environment that alter the environment in demonstrable ways;
  2. providing scientific measurement of over-exploitation of the environment and consequences of such action.

To meet these objectives, the atlas provides:

  1. a collection of spectacular “before and after” satellite image pairs on various themes for 80 sites around the world;
  2. over 30 environmental case studies supported by narratives, images and ground photographs;
  3. and a compilation of recently released environmental maps.

A fantastic collection of maps and satellite images, which will enrich the environmental section of any library.

“One Planet Many People Atlas of Our
Changing Environment clearly illustrates that our ozonosphere has been
threatened by human activities. It also shows that this problem has
been practically solved due to the collaborative efforts of the
different sectors of our society. We all need to work together to
address the many other problems that affect the health of our planet.
As illustrated in this atlas, we need integrated, interdisciplinary
approaches to mitigate the adverse effects of human-induced activities
on the environment”.

Mario J. Molina

Co-winner of the 1995 Nobel Prize in
Chemistry for his work in atmospheric chemistry, particularly
concerning the formation and decomposition of ozone. Institute
Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

“One Planet Many People Atlas of Our
Changing Environment demonstrates how our growing number of people and
their consumption patterns are shrinking our natural resource base. The
challenge is how do we satisfy human needs without compromising the
health of ecosystems. One Planet Many People is an additional wake-up
call to this need”.

Ola Ullsten

Co-Chair World Commission on Forests and Sustainable Development Former Prime Minister of Sweden

(Credits UNEP Atlas)

Under the 6th Framework Programme for Research (FP6) activity ‘Global
Monitoring for Environment and Security’ (GMES), the Commission will
provide €1.1m support for a new research project, called “ASSIST”, on
improving risk warning and risk management of landslides, avalanches,
debris flows and floods in Alpine regions.

Under the 6th Framework Programme for Research (FP6) activity
‘Global Monitoring for Environment and Security’ (GMES), the Commission
will provide €1.1m support for a new research project, called “ASSIST”,
on improving risk warning and risk management of landslides,
avalanches, debris flows and floods in Alpine regions. The results of
this project can easily be extended to other mountainous areas. Under
GMES, the Commission is currently funding 14 projects. ASSIST is the
latest and fifteenth project.

Commission Vice-President Günter Verheugen stated: “With the closure of
the latest call for proposals for space research projects, the
Commission has taken an important step in fostering dialogue between
stakeholders from both the provider and the user side of information in
the fields of environment and security. Whilst making the lives of
citizens safer, we are also helping EU industry to become more
competitive through developing a strong and innovative industrial pole
both for information services and space/terrestrial infrastructure.”

Mountain ranges or chains account for 30%
of EU territory, with some 30 million inhabitants. Areas include the
Alps, Sierra Nevada, the Island of Crete, the Pyrenees, the Apennines,
the Sierra de Estrela, the Massif Central, the upper Tatra and the
Carpathians. Mountain areas represent over 50% of the territory in
Italy, Spain, Greece, Austria, Switzerland and Portugal. The goal of
ASSIST is to implement pre-operational services and establish advanced
integrated safety and information services for the Alps.

Several important benefits can be obtained from an integrated use of
satellite based earth observation data, combining the all-weather
capabilities of SAR (synthetic aperture radar) images with high
resolution optical satellite data as a complement to existing airborne
and meteorological data. At a technical level, the project utilises
so-called “Service Nodes”, which are autonomously operated, such as
police, hospitals, air rescue, fire-fighters, etc. The nodes will be
laid out to support a) day-to-day monitoring and predictions of risk
mitigation scenarios and b) operation during actual crisis situations.
Seven partners from Austria, Germany, Italy and Switzerland, engaged in
different areas of research, satellite remote sensing, communication
technology, and alpine safety management, are collaborating in the
development of a product portfolio of safety and risk information for
direct use in the participating alpine safety information centres.

GMES
is a joint initiative of the Commission and the European Space Agency
aimed at improving environmental and security-related information to
better manage crisis situations.

The call for proposals constitutes a crucial part of the wider GMES
Action Plan which focuses on dialogue with and among stakeholders (e.g.
through the GMES Forum), user involvement (e.g. GMES Steering
Committee), cooperation and partnership (think tanks and networks, e.g.
the European Environment Agency – EEA) as well as information exchange
and information dissemination. Operational GMES services may be
provided by industry on a commercial basis, a prerequisite to the
development of a European industrial pole.

More information http://europa.eu.int/comm/space/programmes/gmes_en.html

(Credits EU – Communiques de Presse Rapid)

UNOSAT is a United Nations initiative to provide the humanitarian community with access to satellite imagery and Geographic Information System (GIS) services.

UNOSAT is a United Nations initiative to provide the humanitarian
community with access to satellite imagery and Geographic Information
System (GIS) services. UNOSAT is implemented by the UN Institute for
Training and Research (UNITAR) and managed by the UN Office for Project
Services (UNOPS). In addition, partners from public and private
organizations constitute the UNOSAT consortium.

The UNOSAT core team consists of UN fieldworkers as well as satellite
imagery experts, geographers, database programmers and internet
communication specialists. This unique combination gives us the ability
to understand the needs of our users and to provide them with suitable,
tailored solutions.

The goal of UNOSAT is to make satellite
imagery and geographic information easily accessible to the
humanitarian community and to experts worldwide working to reduce
disasters and plan sustainable development. To do this we acquire
satellite images from all commercial providers.

UNOSAT is a unique cooperation initiative between the UN, science and
satellite industry that ensures low-cost and high quality solutions.

UNOSAT provides services in the following areas:

  1. Satellite imagery selection and procurement assistance
  2. Image processing
  3. Map production
  4. Methodological guidance
  5. Technical assistance
  6. Training

(Credits UNOSAT)

The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has published a report advising governments to use space technology more wisely in order to address civil needs.

The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
has published a report advising governments to use space technology
more wisely in order to address civil needs.

Space technology can be used in
particular to tackle five major challenges, according to the report:
environmental problems, including natural disasters; the use of natural
resources; the increasing mobility of goods and people; growing
security threats; and the development of the information society. And
in order to make the most of this technology‘s potential, it is
recommended that governments do three broad things: implement a
sustainable space infrastructure; encourage public use and encourage
private sector participation.

According to the OECD, this report is unusual in two respects: it is
written from the point of view of society and addresses governments
rather than industry; and it focuses on the demand side rather than the
supply side of space technology.

‘Most past studies of the space sector
have focused on the supply side: technological advances and the types
of new capabilities that can be developed. They assume, often
incorrectly, that development eventually follows such advances. This
publication [Space 2030: Tackling Society‘s Challenges] explores
instead how governments can get the most out of future public and
private space investment,’ states the OECD.

A number of conditions must be met if
governments are to reap the benefits of space. Primarily, barriers such
as institutional arrangements and regulations must be addressed.

The space sector usually involves three
sets of actors: space agencies, public and private operators of space
applications, and the upstream segment of the industry (spacecraft and
launcher manufacturers and providers of launching services). Countries
must clarify the role of each, and also define the relationships
between the actors, according to the OECD. Different countries may
adopt different solutions according to their priorities, and in some
cases this may distort competition at international level, the report
adds.

Moving onto the legal framework affecting space technology, the report
notes that a number of countries still do not have national space laws,
and that this represents ‘a source of uncertainty for space actors,
especially private ones’. Also, because international space law is a
public regime, it is not well suited to business transactions, and
national laws that do exist are not always business-oriented as they
were often developed with a view to security and strategic
considerations rather than business.

The regulatory framework, says the OECD,
‘should ideally provide basic rules of the game’ that ensure a stable
and predictable environment for business, stimulate innovation and
encourage entrepreneurship. ‘This is far from the case,’ states the
report, citing the International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
procedure for allocating frequencies and orbital slots, which ‘raises a
number of issues and is a source of uncertainties’, according to the
OECD. Space debris is another area that is inadequately addressed,
while several standardisation questions remain open, the report claims.

The OECD carried out a number of studies
before writing this report, and is therefore confident of the accuracy
of its warning that ‘the potential of space will not be realised unless
governments take decisive action to improve the framework conditions
that govern space activities.’

Another problem highlighted by the OECD
is the lack of public awareness about space activities. General
perceptions are distorted due to the media focus on exclusively
sensational successes and failures, states the report. As a result,
citizens have a poor understanding of the value of space-based services
for their daily lives and thus do not fully support further investment
in this technology.

Prospects for the
downstream segment of the sector – space applications – are looking far
more promising than those for the upstream sector- space asset
manufacturing and launch services, according to the OECD. The upstream
segment suffers from ‘a situation of chronic oversupply’ owing largely
to a desire of governments of space-faring nations to establish and
maintain independent access to space for strategic and national
sovereignty reasons.

While the future looks bright for certain
applications, not all should be pursued with the same intensity, the
OECD believes. The report points to information-intensive applications
such as satellite-based telecommunications, Earth observation and
navigation as having huge potential, but casts doubt on the prospects
for transport and manufacturing applications on account of the
decreasing cost of access to space.

Governments are advised to broaden their view of which policy areas are
relevant to space. Research, economic, social and environmental polices
all impact upon space activities, and decision-makers should be aware
of this, advises the report.

The report is intended by the OECD to
provide recommendations for actions in the short and medium term while
looking at space from a long-term policy point of view.

Category: Miscellaneous

Data Source Provider: Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)

Document Reference: Based on the OECD report ‘Space 2030: Tackling Society‘s Challenges’

Subject Index : Aerospace Technology; Social Aspects;
Environmental Protection; Economic Aspects; Innovation, Technology
Transfer

RCN: 24030

(Credits OECD and CORDIS RTD-NEWS/© European Communities)

On 20 June 2005, a summit between the European Union and the United
States of America brought together the Prime Minister and current
President of the European Council, Jean-Claude Juncker, Commission
President José Manuel Barroso, and US President George W. Bush in
Washington D.C.

On 20 June 2005, a summit between the European Union and the
United States of America brought together the Prime Minister and
current President of the European Council, Jean-Claude Juncker,
Commission President José Manuel Barroso, and US President George W.
Bush in Washington D.C. The leaders explored means to eliminate
impediments to further economic integration and to develop a
forward-looking strategy to enhance the EU-US economic partnership.

A new EU and US Initiative was launched
to enhance transatlantic economic integration and growth. Both
countries will increasingly rely on innovation and advanced
technologies to stimulate economic growth and prosperity: the aim is to
increase synergies across the Atlantic as both economies become more
knowledge-based.

More particularly, activities will be
carried on to promote cooperation using civilian space-based
technologies for sustainable development, science/exploration, and
deepening the knowledge society. Targeted initiatives will encourage
collaboration on long-term basic research within the context of the
EU-U.S. Science and Technology agreement, and develop exchanges of good
practices concerning the policies needed to support science and
innovation.

(Credits EU-Space)

Agreement on Contribution to the 2005 World Summit Reached; Space and Water Discussed.

VIENNA, 20 June (UN Information Service) —

During
its 48th session, which was held in Vienna from 8 to 17 June, the
United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS)
agreed on a text that could be transmitted to the President of the
United Nations General Assembly by Member States of COPUOS for
incorporation into the draft outcome document of the 2005 World Summit,
to be held from 14 to 16 September 2005.

“The work that is conducted by the
Committee is strongly linked to the work of the other entities of the
United Nations system, and takes into account a great number of the
priority goals of the General Assembly, in particular the matters
relating to sustainable social and economic development”, the President
of the fifty-ninth session of the General Assembly, H.E. Mr. Jean Ping,
told the Members of COPUOS in his opening statement.

Topics of discussion included space and water, space and society, ways
and means of maintaining outer space for peaceful purposes, spin-off
benefits of space technology, as well as issues raised in the
Scientific and Technical Subcommittee and the Legal Subcommittee
earlier this year. Those issues included space-system-based disaster
management support, space-system-based telemedicine, space debris, the
use of nuclear power sources in outer space, examination of the
preliminary draft protocol on matters specific to space assets and the
practice of States and international organizations in registering space
objects.

The Committee endorsed the activities of
the United Nations Programme on Space Applications for the second half
of 2005 and for 2006. It also reviewed the activities of the
International Satellite System for Search and Rescue (Cospas-Sarsat).
Among other activities, the United Nations Programme on Space
Applications holds training courses on satellite-aided search and
rescue.

Space and water

The Committee continued to consider its
agenda item on space and water. Space applications could contribute to
cost-effective water resource management as well as to forecasting and
mitigation of water-related emergencies. Remote sensing satellites
contribute to determining various water management indicators, such as
precipitation and changes in underground water storage, while
communication satellites are used for gathering data on water quality.
The Committee agreed to continue its discussions of this topic next
year.

Implementation of the recommendations of UNISPACE III

The Committee discussed the implementation
of the recommendations of the Third United Nations Conference on the
Exploration and Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (UNISPACE III). In October
2004, the General Assembly reviewed the progress made in the
implementation of those recommendations and endorsed a set of future
actions proposed by the Committee in its report to the Assembly. The
Committee discussed some of those proposals.

Among other things, COPUOS agreed on
steps to establish a closer link between its work relating to the
implementation of the recommendations of UNISPACE III and the work
being carried out by the Commission on Sustainable Development.

The Committee also reviewed the progress
made in the work of the ad hoc expert group that is conducting a study
on the possibility of creating an international entity to coordinate
space-based services for use in disaster management.

Space and society

Under the agenda item on space and society,
COPUOS focused its discussions on space and education. The Committee
received information from Member States on several national
tele-education initiatives that are providing educators and students at
all levels, including those living in remote areas, with high-quality
education consisting of the latest teaching resources, vocational and
teacher-training and adult education, in fields such as women‘s
empowerment, family planning and skills for local artisans.

Symposium

A symposium on “Space and Archaeology” was
held on Monday, 13 June. The symposium was co-organized by the United
Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (OOSA), the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the
Institute for Global Mapping and Research of Austria. The symposium
addressed topics such as the current and future uses of space
technology in archaeology and archaeology‘s contribution to human
development, UNESCO‘s Open Initiative on the use of space technologies
to support the World Heritage Convention, space applications in
archaeological exploration and documentation in Syria, understanding
cultural and natural heritage information using space technology in
China, and remote sensing and virtual reconstruction of archaeological
landscapes.

The Committee agreed that a symposium on space and forests should be held during its next session, in 2006.

New permanent observer

The Committee granted the European Space
Policy Institute, an international non-governmental entity, based in
Vienna, permanent observer status with COPUOS.

Membership

COPUOS has the following 67 Member States:
Albania, Algeria, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Benin,
Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Canada, Chad, Chile, China,
Colombia, Cuba, Czech Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, France, Germany,
Greece, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Italy, Japan,
Kazakhstan, Kenya, Lebanon, Libya, Malaysia, Mexico, Mongolia, Morocco,
Netherlands, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines,
Poland, Portugal, Republic of Korea, Romania, Russian Federation, Saudi
Arabia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, South Africa, Spain, Sudan,
Sweden, Syria, Thailand, Turkey, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United
States, Uruguay, Venezuela and Viet Nam.

The Committee on the Peaceful Uses of
Outer Space (COPUOS) was set up by the General Assembly in 1959 to
review the scope of international cooperation in the peaceful uses of
outer space, to devise programmes in this field to be undertaken under
United Nations auspices, to encourage continued research and the
dissemination of information on outer space matters and to study legal
problems arising from the exploration of outer space. COPUOS and its
two Subcommittees each meet annually to consider questions put before
them by the General Assembly, reports submitted to them and issues
raised by the Member States. The Committee and the Subcommittees,
working on the basis of consensus, make recommendations to the General
Assembly.

The United Nations Office for Outer Space
Affairs (OOSA) implements the decisions of the General Assembly and of
the Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space and its two
Subcommittees, the Scientific and Technical Subcommittee and the Legal
Subcommittee. The Office is responsible for promoting international
cooperation in the peaceful uses of outer space, and assisting
developing countries in using space science and technology.

Located in Vienna, Austria, OOSA maintains a website at http://www.unoosa.org/.

(Credits Spaceref)

At the meeting of its Board
of Directors 22 June, Spot Image named Hervé Buchwalter as its new
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, as of 1 July.

Toulouse – July 1, 2005 –

At the meeting of its Board of Directors
22 June, Spot Image named Hervé Buchwalter as its new Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer, as of 1 July. He succeeds Jean-Marc Nasr who
lead the company since 2001 and who is moving to a new position within
the EADS group.

Hervé Buchwalter, 45, joined Matra Espace
in 1983. He occupied a series of management positions in the field of
Earth observation systems, particularly on the French and European SPOT
5, Envisat and METOP programmes, by which time the company had become
EADS Astrium. Prior to joining Spot Image, Mr. Buchwalter was Head of
International Business Development within the Earth Observation,
Navigation and Science Business Division of Astrium, a position he held
since 1999. While there, several satellite contracts were won,
including FORMOSAT-2 (Taiwan), KOMPSAT-2 (Korea), THEOS (Thailand) and
recently COMS (Korea), making EADS Astrium leader in this field.

A graduate of the Ecole Centrale de
Paris, he completed his Executive Masters of Business Administration
(MBA) in 2000, from the CPA (Centre de Perfectionnement aux Affaires)
Programme offered by HEC, the top business school in France.

“I wish to praise the excellent work of my predecessor and the
worldwide staff of the Spot Image group over the last few years,”
stated Hervé Buchwalter. “ The business strategy has resulted in our
strong leadership position in the global Earth observation industry. My
goal is to strengthen this leadership with our new partner satellite
FORMOSAT-2, to help ensure international distribution of THEOS and
TerraSAR-X and to develop new partnerships. One of our most exciting
challenge will be to prepare for our high resolution Pleiades
constellation, scheduled for first launch in 2008, working closely with
CNES. And I know that I can count on the experience and motivation of
everyone in the Spot Image group to achieve these goals, and to
continue our global leadership.”

Spot Image is the commercial operator of
the SPOT system, with nearly 20 years’ experience as a provider of
satellite data. The company generates 75% of its revenues outside
Europe.

Through its headquarters in France, five subsidiaries in Australia,
China, Japan, Singapore and the United States, three offices in Brazil,
Mexico and the United Arab Emirates, and a global network of receiving
stations, channel partners and distributors, Spot Image supplies
geographic information derived from optical and radar satellite imagery
to users in the private and public sectors all over the world.

(Credits Spot Image)

Spot Image and ImageONE have signed a commercial partnership agreement
giving ImageONE exclusive rights to distribute FORMOSAT-2 data to the
entire Japanese market.

Toulouse, 21 July 2005

Spot Image and ImageONE have signed a
commercial partnership agreement giving ImageONE exclusive rights to
distribute FORMOSAT-2 data to the entire Japanese market. The agreement
also grants three minutes per day priority reservation of the
satellite’s resources on the orbit west of Japan.

“The energy and enthusiasm that ImageONE
has shown in the distribution of SPOT products in Japan convinced us
that they are the best partner to promote FORMOSAT-2,” said Hervé
Buchwalter, Chairman & CEO of Spot Image. “The data from this new
satellite will reinforce the success of efforts to promote SPOT 5, for
which we also signed in 2002 an exclusive agreement for the national
security market.”

Japan’s space programmes
reflect its strong interest in satellite-based Earth observation and
are spurring development of thematic applications. Japan has been the
biggest user of SPOT imagery in the Asia-Pacific region for several
years now.

“With its daily 2m imaging capability over
territories surrounding Japan, FORMOSAT-2 will certainly become an
attractive data source for Japanese customers. FORMOSAT-2 will also
serve as a good complementary data source to SPOT-5 for the territories
surrounding Japan,” explained Hiroshi Nashimoto, President of ImageONE.

The FORMOSAT-2 Earth-observation satellite was launched by Taiwan’s
National Space Organization (NSPO), the country’s space agency, in May
2004. It provides black-and-white images at two-metre resolution and
colour images at eight-metre resolution. The NSPO has chosen Spot Image
as exclusive global distributor of FORMOSAT-2 products and services
outside Taiwan and China.

The Spot Image group is headquartered in
Toulouse, France, has five subsidiaries and three offices. It draws on
a global network of ground receiving stations, channel partners and
distributors to provide users with multi-resolution optical and radar
imagery. The density of this network makes it possible to bring
solutions and support to public- and private-sector decision-makers
anywhere in the world.

ImageONE Co. Ltd has
been active in the Japanese Earth-observation market as a supplier of
EO satellite ground receiving stations for over 10 years. Today, the
company distributes EO satellite data, related equipment and software,
and value-added information for decision-making and project support
services. It is the only comprehensive solution provider in the
Japanese EO market.

For further information
Spot Image Global Communications

France: Corporate Communications – Tel: +33 (0)5 62 19 40 10
Anne-Marie.Bernard@spotimage.fr
United States: Clark Nelson –

Tel: +1 (0)703 715 3131
nelson@spot.com

Japan: ImageONE –

Tel: +81 359082800

http://www.spotimage.fr

http://www.imageone.co.jp/


http://www.nspo.org.tw/e60/menu0400.html

(Credits Spot Image)

Regulators are under increasing pressure to find more effective
and efficient approaches to regulation.

Jun 22, 2005

Regulators are under increasing pressure to
find more effective and efficient approaches to regulation. SciSys
offers a wide ranging, flexible solution.

Today’s regulators are being asked to not only enforce new and changing
directives faster and more cost effectively, but also to provide a
better service to customers and a more transparent and consistent
approach to regulation. At the recent GC2005 show SciSys showed
regulators how we could help streamline processes effectively, ensure
they are applied coherently and unambiguously, and provide real
benefits and advice to customers.

SciSys provides consultancy services to
support regulators in finding more efficient and proactive ways to
regulate; flexible software modules to build in efficiency and take out
costs; and ongoing support and development to future proof the
regulation process.

Improving the process

SciSys is already working with regulators
to provide them with more efficient and effective ways to administer
and deliver licensing, monitoring and compliance checking. For example,
measures such as improved data access or streamlining the
administration of licenses and subsequent checking activities can
release staff to genuinely add value to the process: advising
businesses on which regulations apply to them, educating them on how to
comply; encouraging a sense of corporate social responsibility and so
reducing the enforcement burden.

“Like many UK regulators, the Environment
Agency was actively looking for ways to be more cost effective, while
also meeting rising expectations for high quality services. To do more,
do it better, and do it with a leaner budget, the EA worked with us on
an initiative that used the latest in technology and thinking to
radically change its business processes. As part of our ongoing
framework agreement, our regulation solution continues to be used to
help the EA fulfil further regulatory obligations, and so to ensure its
staff have more time and resources to fully evaluate permit
applications and their implications, and for managers to co-ordinate
work scheduling and resource planning more effectively”.

Our regulation solutions span the
complete regulation process, including Licensing, Monitoring,
Compliance and may be offered collectively or independently, providing
customers with solutions that integrate with existing legacy systems.

For more information about our work in
regulation, please call 01249 466466 and ask for the regulation team.
Or Download a factsheet to find out more.

(Credits Scisys)

Concerning the CAP-reform and the accession of several new
EU-countries, SAGACAP wants to generalize and optimize EUROSENSE’s
agricultural control-service to make it applicable to the new market
situation.

Concerning the CAP-reform and the accession of several new
EU-countries, SAGACAP wants to generalize and optimize EUROSENSE’s
agricultural control-service to make it applicable to the new market
situation.

SAGACAP wants to generalize EUROSENSE’s
well-developed agricultural control workflow to make it more generic
and widely applicable. With the change of CAP-regulations (Common
Agricultural Policy) and the accession of several new EU countries,
timing is ideal for the creation of a generic service and specific
products. SAGACAP wants to anticipate on this new market situation and
is therefore a typical EO-market generation project.

Main issue of SAGACAP, is to generalize and optimize the agricultural
control workflow, according to the CAP-reform and the new geographic
conditions in accession EU-countries. Besides the control (by remote
sensing) of area and land use also the several new measures of the
cross-compliance have to be taken in account. The goal is to construct
a reliable agricultural control-service as generic as possible, so it
can operate in different geographical areas, taking in account
different environmental conditions, according to different national
interpretations and legislations and with different types of
input-data. The challenge is to develop and examine technical solutions
for the control-service to make this possible.

SAGACAP is a project under the EOMD-programme of ESA, “Earth Observation Market Development”.

(Credits Eurosense.com)