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Airbus Defence and Space to build ESA’s Biomass Forest Monitoring Satellite

By Caleb Henry | May 9, 2016
      Biomass Airbus Defence and Space

      Artist’s rendition of the Biomass satellite. Photo: Airbus Defence and Space

      [Via Satellite 05-06-2016] Airbus Defence and Space has signed a contract with the European Space Agency (ESA) to build its next Earth Explorer mission, the Biomass satellite. Biomass is due to launch in 2021 and will measure forest biomass to assess terrestrial carbon stocks and fluxes for five years.

      The spacecraft will carry the first space-borne P-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) to deliver maps of tropical, temperate and boreal forest biomass that are not obtainable by ground measurement techniques. The mission will collect frequent information on global forests to determine the distribution of above-ground biomass in these forests and measure annual changes. The five-year mission will see at least eight growth cycles in the worlds’ forests.

      By using P-band SAR, the mission will use all-weather imaging from space to estimate forest biomass. Biomass will also be able to measure paleo-aquifers in desert regions to find new water sources in arid regions as well as contribute to observations of ice sheet dynamics, subsurface geology and forest topography. Because Biomass will see through the forest canopy to the ground, it will be able to provide terrain height maps, improving current digital elevation models in densely forested areas.

      Biomass data will support REDD+, a UN climate change initiative aimed at reducing emissions due to deforestation, by systematically monitoring forests in vulnerable areas with no need for ground intervention.