Andrew Yee
October 18th 05, 01:14 AM
Canadian Space Agency
October 5, 2005
Five years of Canadian involvement in Charter for monitoring disasters
Longueuil, Quebec -- The Canadian Space Agency is actively taking part in
a meeting to mark the fifth year of operations for the International
Charter: Space and Major Disasters.
Members of the Charter who are meeting in Bangalore, India, are reviewing
the capabilities of remote sensing that support global disaster management
using actual cases over the five-year period. There will be a special
focus on the response of the Charter to the tsunami in Southeast Asia and
hurricane Katrina. The Members are also looking at operational aspects
such as lessons learned and effectiveness, while outlining improvements
and the direction of the Charter.
About the Charter
The Charter originated as a cooperation initiative between founding
members with the aim of providing ready access to value-added Earth
observation satellite data to countries or communities whose populations
have been exposed to risk, or affected by a natural or man-made disaster.
The Charter offers to emergency-measures organizations an integrated
response to rapidly assess and mitigate disasters. The unique system for
emergency management developed by the partners has been activated over 100
times since November 2000, responding to floods, fires, landslides,
typhoons, volcanic eruptions, oil spills, tsunamis, hurricanes,
earthquakes, and civil accidents the world over.
With quick response times of 38 to 48 hours and highly reliable data, the
Charter has responded effectively and has enhanced the delivery of space
data to assist rescue and humanitarian relief efforts.
The Charter in Action
A recent example of the Charter's impact is the response to the 2004
tsunami in India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and Thailand. Some 200 passive
(electro-optical) and active (synthetic aperture radar) sensor images
acquired from satellites owned or operated by Charter members were
processed and an equally large number of image products were delivered to
assist the countries.
For hurricane Katrina, Charter activation provided space data on levee
breaching and floodwaters in New Orleans on August 29, 2005. Flooding was
extensive, with 80% of the city and Gulf coast and the Mississippi under
six metres of water on August 31.
The Charter Members
The Charter was drafted by the founding members at the Third United
Nations Conference on the Exploration and Peaceful Uses of Outer Space
(UNISPACE III) in 1999. Many organizations have joined the Canadian Space
Agency (CSA), the European Space Agency (ESA), and France's Centre
national d'études spatiales (CNES) to offer their valuable and diverse
capabilities and technical resources: the Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO), the United States National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Argentina's National Commission on
Space Activities (CONAE), the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA),
and, most recently, the United States Geological Survey (USGS), and the
British National Space Centre (BNSC).
The United Nations, through its Office of Outer Space Affairs (OOSA)
became a cooperating body in 2004, to promote the Charter as a gateway for
United Nations agencies that respond to natural disasters and emergencies.
- 30 -
For more information on the International Charter: Space and Major
Disasters and images related to various disasters, please visit:
http://www.disasterscharter.org
or
http://www.space.gc.ca
Nicholas Girard
Communications Advisor
Media Relations
Canadian Space Agency
Telephone: (450) 926-4370
October 5, 2005
Five years of Canadian involvement in Charter for monitoring disasters
Longueuil, Quebec -- The Canadian Space Agency is actively taking part in
a meeting to mark the fifth year of operations for the International
Charter: Space and Major Disasters.
Members of the Charter who are meeting in Bangalore, India, are reviewing
the capabilities of remote sensing that support global disaster management
using actual cases over the five-year period. There will be a special
focus on the response of the Charter to the tsunami in Southeast Asia and
hurricane Katrina. The Members are also looking at operational aspects
such as lessons learned and effectiveness, while outlining improvements
and the direction of the Charter.
About the Charter
The Charter originated as a cooperation initiative between founding
members with the aim of providing ready access to value-added Earth
observation satellite data to countries or communities whose populations
have been exposed to risk, or affected by a natural or man-made disaster.
The Charter offers to emergency-measures organizations an integrated
response to rapidly assess and mitigate disasters. The unique system for
emergency management developed by the partners has been activated over 100
times since November 2000, responding to floods, fires, landslides,
typhoons, volcanic eruptions, oil spills, tsunamis, hurricanes,
earthquakes, and civil accidents the world over.
With quick response times of 38 to 48 hours and highly reliable data, the
Charter has responded effectively and has enhanced the delivery of space
data to assist rescue and humanitarian relief efforts.
The Charter in Action
A recent example of the Charter's impact is the response to the 2004
tsunami in India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and Thailand. Some 200 passive
(electro-optical) and active (synthetic aperture radar) sensor images
acquired from satellites owned or operated by Charter members were
processed and an equally large number of image products were delivered to
assist the countries.
For hurricane Katrina, Charter activation provided space data on levee
breaching and floodwaters in New Orleans on August 29, 2005. Flooding was
extensive, with 80% of the city and Gulf coast and the Mississippi under
six metres of water on August 31.
The Charter Members
The Charter was drafted by the founding members at the Third United
Nations Conference on the Exploration and Peaceful Uses of Outer Space
(UNISPACE III) in 1999. Many organizations have joined the Canadian Space
Agency (CSA), the European Space Agency (ESA), and France's Centre
national d'études spatiales (CNES) to offer their valuable and diverse
capabilities and technical resources: the Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO), the United States National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Argentina's National Commission on
Space Activities (CONAE), the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA),
and, most recently, the United States Geological Survey (USGS), and the
British National Space Centre (BNSC).
The United Nations, through its Office of Outer Space Affairs (OOSA)
became a cooperating body in 2004, to promote the Charter as a gateway for
United Nations agencies that respond to natural disasters and emergencies.
- 30 -
For more information on the International Charter: Space and Major
Disasters and images related to various disasters, please visit:
http://www.disasterscharter.org
or
http://www.space.gc.ca
Nicholas Girard
Communications Advisor
Media Relations
Canadian Space Agency
Telephone: (450) 926-4370