Gulf News

It’s a jungle out there...

EYES IN THE SKY TRACK HEALTH OF EARTH’S AFRICAN ‘LUNG’

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It’s like a medical X-ray. You have to handle and interpret the satellite image correctly so that it can be intelligib­le to the ordinary user.”

Ghislain Moussavou | AGEOS’s scientific director

High in the sky, a satellite passes over the equatorial forest of west Africa, the Earth’s second largest “lung” after the Amazon. In Ntoum, a village about 30 kilometres from Gabon’s capital Libreville, a giant satellite dish slowly swings into action, capturing key data on Africa’s environmen­tal health.

It takes in a broad sweep of 23 countries from the Sahara Desert to southern Africa, covering a 2,800-kilometre radius.

The idea for the station, inaugurate­d in August, stemmed from UN climate talks in Bali, Indonesia, in 2007.

“We realised the importance of our forests and of the importance of satellite imagery as a scientific tool,” recalled Tanguy Gahouma Bekale, special adviser to Gabonese President Ali Bongo on climate issues.

Enormous challenges

Gahouma now also directs the Gabonese Agency for Space Studies and Observatio­n, which goes by the French acronym AGEOS and runs the Ntoum station.

The forested countries of the Congo Basin face enormous challenges.

“We are responsibl­e for the secondbigg­est green lung on the planet, and now we have the resources to answer these questions,” Gahouma said.

The informatio­n AGEOS gathers is invaluable for the protection of an environmen­t increasing­ly threatened by drought, maritime pollution and logging. Satellite data can track changes such as the size of Lake Chad, which has shrunk by 90 per cent in the past 50 years, or that of Gabon’s forests.

The station, built for some $9.5 million (Dh35 million) with French funding, has direct access to data from Nasa satellites in the United States and the Italian-French group Telespazio.

At the Nkok reception station, around 20 mainly Gabonese scientists sift through the latest data.

“It’s like a medical X-ray. You have to handle and interpret the satellite image correctly so that it can be intelligib­le to the ordinary user,” said Ghislain Moussavou, AGEOS’s scientific director.

His team is developing a new map of Gabon’s forest cover, which currently makes up 88 per cent of the country.

It is mostly primary forest, crisscross­ed by rivers and smaller waterways and populated by a wealth of fauna including elephants, buffalos, antelopes and apes. The government says it wants to calibrate Gabon’s economic, agricultur­al and mining developmen­t with the need to protect this exceptiona­l ecosystem.

Since different types of forest harbour different levels of carbon, careful planning regarding where to exploit timber and where to grow palms for oil, for example, can rein in carbon emissions, Moussavou said.

Another team is poring over satellite data on the waters of the Gulf of Guinea, looking for oil spills and monitoring large-scale commercial fishing.

Dots on a screen pinpoint the locations of ships off Gabon’s shores.

The analysts are able to identify the vessels down to their names, registrati­on numbers and the flags they are flying, said Dominique Rozier, a Telespazio engineer assigned to AGEOS.

The technology is providing a welcome new tool to crack down on illegal fishing and aid in the management of fish stocks.

AGEOS plans to share its data freely with the other countries covered by the satellite footprint.

“The forests of the Congo basin are a heritage that we should manage jointly. It makes no sense to protect the forest in one part while the vast remaining territory is not protected,” Gahouma said.

Talks are under way with Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo to determine how they can gain access to the satellite images.

The station, built for some $9.5 million (Dh35 million) with French funding, has direct access to data from Nasa satellites in the United States and the Italian-French group Telespazio.

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 ?? AFP ?? Invaluable informatio­n A technician works at the Gabonese Agency for Space Observatio­n (AGEOS ), about 30km from Libreville. The informatio­n AGEOS gathers is invaluable for the protection of the environmen­t.
AFP Invaluable informatio­n A technician works at the Gabonese Agency for Space Observatio­n (AGEOS ), about 30km from Libreville. The informatio­n AGEOS gathers is invaluable for the protection of the environmen­t.
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