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What's new?
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GEO-VI web pages now on-line
Information on the GEO-VI Plenary meeting, including details on registration, visas, exhibits, accommodation, and much more, is now available on the GEO-VI web pages. GEO-VI will be held in Washington DC on 17 and 18 November.
GEO newsletter
GEO News Issue #3 (18 May 2009)
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Survey to assess SAR & agricultural monitoring
Canadian GEO invites the GEO community to participate in a "Survey on SAR to Support Agricultural Monitoring". The Survey aims to capture user views on the use of SAR for agricultural applications. The results will contribute to a better understanding of user requirements and help to inform international providers of SAR data about the requirements for agricultural monitoring. All persons involved in agricultural monitoring -- whether in research, science, operations, or decision making, and with or without experience in or detailed knowledge of SAR -- are encouraged to participate. The findings from the survey will be presented at the International GEO Workshop on SAR to Support Agricultural Monitoring, to be held in Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada, from 2-4 November 2009. The survey findings and report will also be made available on the Canadian GEO website at www.cgeo.gc.ca.
IUGG announces 2011 General Assembly
The International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) will hold its next General Assembly from 27 June - 8 July 2011 in Melbourne, Australia. The conference will address major scientific issues of global and regional significance and concern, including recent natural disasters and extreme weather events. For more information, visit the IUGG web site.
Malta and Guinea join GEO
The Governments of Malta and the Republic of Guinea joined the Group on Earth Observations on 29 May. The total number of GEO Members is now 80 (79 governments plus the European Commission). A complete list of GEO Members and Participating Organizations can be found on the GEO Website.
CODATA newsletter examines GEOSS
CODATA interviews GEO Secretariat Director José Achache about data sharing and other GEO priorities in a special issue of its newsletter.
SERVIR speeds response to Honduran earthquake
Following the 28 May, 7.3-magnitude earthquake in Honduras (which also damaged neighbouring Belize), the SERVIR monitoring and visualization portal gave decision makers and emergency responders the rapid access they needed to high-resolution satellite imagery of the affected areas. Drawing on recent advances in impact analysis and user training, SERVIR demonstrated the value of GEOSS and the international collaboration, data sharing and capacity building that it promotes. For more information, visit the SERVIR web site.
UNEP and partners to contribute Black Sea data to GEOSS
The UN Environment Programme, the University of Geneva, and 26 other partners, with funding from the European Commission, are adding an important system to GEOSS by deploying the latest observation and assessment technologies to monitor environmental trends in the Black Sea. See the UNEP press release here.
Romania to host data-mining workshop
The International Workshop on Innovative Data Mining Techniques in Support of GEOSS, to be held from 31 August to 2 September, will explore how to improve the extraction of data and images from the petabytes of Earth observations now available in rapidly expanding archives. For more information, please see the invitation letter
White Paper on the GEOSS Data Sharing Principles
The GEOSS 10-Year Implementation Plan explicitly acknowledges the importance of data sharing in achieving the GEOSS vision and anticipated societal benefits.
This White Paper reviews the background issues for implementing the GEOSS Data Sharing Principles and recommends Implementation Guidelines to ensure the strongest possible framework for data sharing, consistent with both the spirit and the “letter” of the Principles.
Read White Paper
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