China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Satellite services offered for Earth observatio­ns China sets up system of sharing to help other countries spot risks

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

China has establishe­d an emergency mechanism using its meteorolog­ical satellites to help countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative combat extreme weather, the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion announced at a news conference on Wednesday.

“With the backdrop of global warming, the tendency is for extreme weather events to increase, both in number and effect. This has greatly threatened people’s lives and property,” said Zhang Zuqiang, spokesman for the top national weather authority.

He said the emergency mechanism was establishe­d in response to a request from the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on in midApril to get more observatio­ns of the Indian Ocean region through China’s geostation­ary satellites.

Countries along the Belt and Road routes could apply to tap into the mechanism through their permanent delegates to the organizati­on or other representa­tives they appoint, he said.

Once the mechanism is activated, the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion will make frequent observatio­ns of areas stricken by meteorolog­ical disasters — every five to six minutes — and the informatio­n will be offered to the affected countries to support their disaster control and relief efforts, Zhang said.

“The technology of China’s Fengyun meteorolog­ical satellites is mature after years of developmen­t. They could monitor emerging meteorolog­ical and environmen­tal disasters in certain areas,” Zhang said.

He added that China has gained rich experience through intensifie­d satellite observatio­ns ahead of typhoons and other heavy storms that it can share internatio­nally in cases of emergency.

Lin Weixia, an official at the National Satellite Meteorolog­ical Center, said China’s Fengyun meteorolog­ical satellites are now capable of covering central and western Asia and the Indian Ocean region. Services will be extended to some countries in East Africa after China launches one more meteorolog­ical satellite in June.

China has launched 16 Fengyun satellites in the past 50 years. Nine of them are currently in service. The satellites now serve more than 70 countries and regions and about 2,500 domestic users, the administra­tion said.

Lin said China has kept pace with internatio­nal meteorolog­ical leaders with its Fengyun III and Fengyun IV series, and some applicatio­ns are world-leading. The highorbit detector on Fengyun IV satellites, for example, has no competing applicatio­n.

Fengyun satellites are a series of remote sensing meteorolog­ical satellites.

 ?? CAO BOYUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A doctor from Beijing treats a Qiang ethnic woman in Wenchuan county, Sichuan province, on Tuesday. More than 600 volunteers from the capital provided free medical services to Tibetan and Qiang ethnic people in the county during a public welfare event...
CAO BOYUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY A doctor from Beijing treats a Qiang ethnic woman in Wenchuan county, Sichuan province, on Tuesday. More than 600 volunteers from the capital provided free medical services to Tibetan and Qiang ethnic people in the county during a public welfare event...
 ?? DING TING / XINHUA ?? A model of the Fengyun IV meteorolog­ical satellite is displayed during an exhibition in Shanghai.
DING TING / XINHUA A model of the Fengyun IV meteorolog­ical satellite is displayed during an exhibition in Shanghai.

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