August 3, 2007
SPACE-BORNE
SENSORS HELP
Zambian water authorities are integrating information based on
satellite
imagery to alleviate water shortages. With inadequate information
causing many
water-related problems, an ESA project has generated a variety of
environmental
maps to provide local policy makers with the necessary tools for
effective
water resource management.
As part of the IWAREMA (Integrated
Water Resource
management for
"The results of
the IWAREMA project can
be used to protect
Having access to these maps allows
authorities to
determine the expansion of urban areas and loss of forest and
agricultural
areas as well as calculate the risk of erosion, change in water
availability
and percentage of surface water, which will allow for early flood
warnings.
The land cover
change maps will help the
government look at past trends in terms of deforestation, reclaimed
land and
new settlement areas to determine the long term affect and implement
corrective
measures.
"With a lot of pressure from population growth and urbanization, the land cover maps will show how demographic variables and pressures will impact natural resources," Nkhoma said.
The project
focused on the
"The IWAREMA project information is
useful for our
policy makers in decision making for the basin and should be extended
to other
basins of the Zambezi so as to improve the data situation and make
comparisons
between areas, as very little information is currently available,"
Banda
Kawawa of the
IWAREMA was one of
the projects initiated
under ESA’s TIGER initiative, launched in 2002 to assist
African countries to
overcome water-related problems and to bridge
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Contact:
Mariangela
D’Acunto
European Space Agency
39-069-418-0856
mariangela.dacunto@esa.int
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