The Guardian Australia

Building Australian network of satellites would reduce reliance on foreign data, scientists say

- Donna Lu

Australia should build its own network of Earth observatio­n satellites to reduce reliance on foreign satellite data that could be compromise­d by environmen­tal or geopolitic­al stressors, scientists say.

The recommenda­tion is included in a national 10-year plan for Australian space science, launched on Thursday by the Australian Academy of Science.

Prof Stuart Phinn, director of the Remote Sensing Research Centre at the University of Queensland, said Earth observatio­n satellites were important for weather forecastin­g and predicting and responding to natural disasters such as the recent volcano eruption in Tonga.

“All of our crop production, our food production and grazing also depends on informatio­n from satellites for a range of purposes. Our defence forces in their operationa­l planning and responses … depend on informatio­n from satellite systems,” Phinn said at a media briefing. The field of space science also has applicatio­ns in environmen­tal management and GPS navigation and timing technologi­es.

Presently, Australia relies on Japanese geostation­ary satellites for weather informatio­n, as well as data from US and European Space Agency satellites, Phinn said. According to the national plan, “there is no guarantee all necessary data sources will always be freely available … This imposes a sovereign risk, especially if Australia is regarded as an unequal contributo­r to the global [Earth observatio­n] community.”

Building and operating satellites locally would ensure Australia’s independen­ce, Phinn said, adding: “We can contribute back globally as well.”

The decadal plan also recommends establishi­ng a national program of space weather research.

It warns that Australia’s current capacity “provides around a one-hour warning of major space weather events” that could knock out global aviation and communicat­ion.

Solar flares – intense explosions in the sun’s atmosphere – can trigger magnetic storms and disrupt satellites, radio communicat­ions and radar operations.

Emeritus Prof Fred Menk, chair of the AAS’s national committee for space and radio science, said: “I can guar

antee that at some point, there’ll be a catastroph­ic space weather event that will fundamenta­lly damage our infrastruc­ture.

“I can’t tell you if that’s going to be next week or in 100 years, and that is because we don’t have the science which allows us to make those sort of prediction­s accurately.”

“What we can do is we can grow our science capability in Australia,” Menk said.

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The plan also recommends establishi­ng space science as a national research priority, and investment in an ongoing national space program.

Menk predicted there would be about 100 missions to the moon in the next decade, as well as other planetary bodies, calling it “a really exciting time to get into interplane­tary science, and to see what we can learn about the solar system”.

 ?? Photograph: Planet Labs Inc./AFP/Getty Images ?? Australia currently relies on Japanese geostation­ary satellites for weather informatio­n, as well as data from US and European Space Agency satellites.
Photograph: Planet Labs Inc./AFP/Getty Images Australia currently relies on Japanese geostation­ary satellites for weather informatio­n, as well as data from US and European Space Agency satellites.

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