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Tagged: environmental

Sunday, April 01, 2012

The following is an excerpt from a presentation by Frank A. Rose, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance, in an address to the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, Space Security Conference, Geneva, Switzerland:

The use of communications satellites to transmit health care data across countries and across the globe is only one of the many uses of space on which we rely. Telephone calls, news reports, television broadcasts, and financial transactions are also relayed through satellites. Financial markets, power grids, and wireless, satellite, cable, and broadcast industries all use GPS satellites for precise timing, and ships, planes, automobiles, and individual people use them for navigation. Meteorological satellites provide weather and environmental forecasts, while remote-sensing satellites provide imagery used in agriculture, resource exploration, land use planning, treaty verification, and disaster relief, amongst other things. Clearly the use of space assets and the information we derive from them permeate almost every aspect of our daily lives. The telehealth scenario I have just mentioned is only one example of how important the utilization of space is, and clearly shows that the loss of space systems, even for a short period of time, can have damaging consequences. Extrapolating from this, we must ask ourselves “What will the consequences be if the space environment were to become unusable?”

- Read the full text

by Joe Francica on 04/01 at 11:23 PM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, March 08, 2012

In Huntsville, Alabama, Magnolia River staged a ribbon cutting ceremony on new offices and announced an expected growth from about 70 employees to almost 200 over the next five years. The company acquired Aeroquest Optimal last December, and now provides a range of services including GIS, surveying, and LiDAR and photogrammetric mapping services. Pictured at right are principals Kimberly and Ronnie Hoff; Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle is to Ms. Hoff's right along with Ron Poteat, vice-chair for economic development of the Chamber’s Board of Directors.

by Joe Francica on 03/08 at 03:17 PM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: energy, environmental, remote sensing

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

David Hayes, the Deputy Secretary for the U. S. Department of the Interior (DOI) was the keynote speaker for the Esri Federal GIS Conference this year calling GIS the most important tool in the federal government.

"Geospatial technology is finally front and center," said Hayes. "The reason I'm so excited about geospatial technology is that it provides us with a much needed mechanism to break down the silos." Hayes discussed how GIS is enabling better management of natural resources that is giving citizens the opportunity to explore open spaces and "America's great outdoors."

Hayes also mentioned how DOI Secretary Ken Salazar is taking on a new tourism initiative to support ecotourism in the U.S. In addition, the DOI hopes to stand up a new Environmental Response Management Application (ERMA), similar to Geoplatform.gov, for the Arctic this summer.

by Joe Francica on 02/22 at 09:20 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, January 05, 2012

The first day of the GeoDesign Summit on the Esri campus in Redlands, California produced some pointed remarks about the "process" and "models" that define this evolving discipline. Collaboration seems to be the hallmark of geodesign whereby myriad stakeholders can see and interact with geospatial information and models.

Continue reading...

by Joe Francica on 01/05 at 08:46 PM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Canada

Canada’s District of North Vancouver was among the winners of the UN-Sasakawa Award for Disaster Risk Reduction at a ceremony at the Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction in Geneva. 

The District of North Vancouver, which experienced a landslide in 2005, also received $12,500. Mayor Richard Walton impressed delegates at the Global Platform with his presentation on the city’s GIS (Geographic Information System) website, where the public can access mapping, census, land, environmental, zoning, buildings and other valuable information that is stored in the district’s GIS. The city’s stated goal is to provide “as much information where possible to our community.”

Mr. Walton told the UN News Centre that the information gathered through the use of the GIS on the land and buildings in the area had enabled engineers to identify 30 properties that needed remedial measures to make them less vulnerable in the event of another landslide or similar disaster.

“We have been able to determine levels of risk, risk tolerance levels, and take mitigation action,” he said.

- UN News Center

VietNam

VietNam's own mapping service is expected online later this year. Those maps will be the only correct ones, so the Bureau behind them offers help for users of other services.

For wrong information about Vietnam’s sovereignty on online maps supplied by Google Map and National Geographic, the Vietnam Mapping and Measurement Bureau has added explanations and instructions for users of online maps of Google and National Geographic.
 
Japan
The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) on May 16 released an updated map showing the predicted radiation exposure for a year ending March 11, 2012, in areas near the Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant.
 
I was unable to find the map in question.
 
 

Continue reading...

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/17 at 03:57 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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