Paper
9 October 2007 ESA activities related to forest fires: ATSR World Fire Atlas (WFA), GlobCarbon, and RISK-EOS
Olivier Arino, Marc Paganini
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
During the past few years, the European Space Agency has launched several projects related to forest fires from global to local scales. The ATSR World Fire Atlas (WFA) project started in late 1995 and is still running today. It provides the longest time series ever produced on the global distribution of active fires. The WFA consists of 12 years of coherent and consistent data sets. The night time fire occurrences are derived from the 3.7 micron channel on-board the ATSR instrument series hosted by the ERS-2 and ENVISAT satellites. The ATSR WFA products were validated first in 1998 with the support of IGBP and more recently by extensive comparisons with existing data sets on forest fires events. A smooth transition from the ERS-2 ATSR-2 to the ENVISAT AATSR has been performed in January 2003 and the quality of the WFA products continuity verified. The ATSR WFA products are available in near real time since May 2006. The distribution of the ATSR WFA products will be thoroughly analyzed in this paper and a synthesis of the work performed by more than 900 registered users will be presented. The GlobCarbon project started in early 2003 with the objective to develop a service for the production of multi-year / multi-sensors global level 3 Land products to be used as input to carbon assimilation models. Understanding the spatial and temporal variation in carbon fluxes is essential to constrain models that predict climate change. However our current knowledge of these spatial and temporal patterns is uncertain, particularly over land. One of the bio-geophysical parameters that the GlobCarbon project aims to measure is the fully calibrated estimate of the burned areas quasi-independent of the original satellite sensor. These burned areas estimates are used in dynamic global vegetation models, a central component of the IGBP-IHDP-WCRP Global Carbon Cycle Joint Project. The service will feature global estimates of burned areas amongst other variables from 1998 to 2007, derived from Earth Observation sensors (ERS-2 ATSR-2, ENVISAT AATSR and SPOT VEGETATION). Finally the RISK-EOS project started in 2003 under the framework of the Global Monitoring for Environment and Security (GMES) initiative, with the objective to establish a network of European service providers for the provision of geoinformation services in support to the risk management of meteorological hazards (floods and fires). The Fire component of RISK-EOS feature two main services: the Burn Scar Mapping (BSM) service that provides some seasonal mapping of forests and semi-natural burned areas at high spatial resolution (minimum mapping unit of 3 to 5 ha); and the Regional Fire Monitoring (RFM) service that provides near real time observation of active fires, based on middle resolution satellite data (AQUA/TERRA MODIS and MSG SEVIRI). The RISK-EOS BSM service builds on the achievements of ITALSCAR, a demonstration project for the yearly mapping of burned areas in Italy, using the LANDSAT Thematic Mapper sensor. The paper will provide a synthesis of the RISK-EOS products validation and utility reports collected during the 2006 summer season.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Olivier Arino and Marc Paganini "ESA activities related to forest fires: ATSR World Fire Atlas (WFA), GlobCarbon, and RISK-EOS", Proc. SPIE 6742, Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology IX, 674206 (9 October 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.748032
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KEYWORDS
Carbon

Satellites

Associative arrays

Vegetation

Sensors

Atmospheric modeling

Data modeling

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