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Industry Gathers For ESA/EC Global Monitoring Programme Representatives from 10 industry consortia met recently to plan the next phase of the ESA's contribution to the Global Monitoring for Environment and Security (GMES) programme. The consortia were selected following an evaluation of proposals received last year for the GMES Services Elements (GSE), the initial stage of ESA's five-year, Euro 83 million commitment to the GMES programme. GMES is an initiative co-sponsored by ESA and the European Commission to develop a global monitoring capability for Europe's policymakers and other end users. Total GMES funding is expected to reach Euro 400 million to develop and implement the programme by 2008. The GSE consortia include more than 125 companies, university and other research firms, consultancies and end-user organisations that include international, national and other government agencies. Each consortium is headed by a prime contractor and consists of up to 20 organisations with an ESA-mandated mix of operational service providers, strategy consultants, system developers, R&D partners and end users. The groups will focus on developing capabilities and identifying the needs of end users under two-phase, 20-month contracts totalling �15 million. Funding will be split evenly among the 10 consortia. The exact composition of the consortia will be announced as the contracts are finalised and signed over the next few months. A week-long meeting in mid-March at ESA's ESRIN facility outside of Rome brought the groups together for the first time to outline end-user requirements and define which existing and future Earth observation services to include in the GMES Service Elements, explained Stephen Briggs, head of ESA's Earth observation applications. "The real winners in GMES will be the end-users," Briggs said. "ESA has tasked the 10 GSE consortia over the next 20 months to convert the high-level GMES strategy into a concrete portfolio of reliable environmental information services, and there will be plenty more to come in the future" Each of the 10 groups will start delivering services immediately, and will back this up with a blueprint for delivering long-term monitoring for themes including:
GMES background At a global level, GMES will provide new verification tools to contribute to the precise monitoring of compliance with international agreements, such as the Kyoto protocol on climate change, as well as security and international aid agreements. At the EU regional level, GMES will provide objective data to support a broad range of public policies, including regional development, transportation, agriculture and foreign policy. GMES also will help local authorities pinpoint environmental problems and minimize the risks and consequences of environmental changes on local populations. GMES is a cornerstone of the unified European space strategy developed by EC and ESA. Along with the Galileo global satellite navigation system, GMES is key to the realisation of a unified space policy emerging from the ever-closer partnership between the two organisations.
GMES GMES Services ERS Envisat Earth Explorers Earth Watch SpaceDaily Search SpaceDaily Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express First DMC Microsat Images Released Guildford - Apr 03, 2003 The initial Earth observation images captured by AlSAT-1, the first DMC microsatellite in orbit, have been released. These images demonstrate the remarkable capability and outstanding performance of the new microsatellite, which produces a unique combination of extremely large image area (up to 600x600 km swath width) at a ground sampling distance of 32-metres in three spectral bands.
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