NASA's new mission: improving food
security in West Africa
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[July 20, 2016]
By Nellie Peyton
DAKAR (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A
drive by NASA to stream climate data to West African nations using its
earth-observing satellites could boost crop production in a region hit
hard by climate change, experts say.
NASA last week launched a hub in Niger's capital Niamey that will use
space-based observations to improve food security and better manage
natural disasters, said Dan Irwin, manager of the SERVIR project, named
after the Spanish word meaning "to serve".
The project, which will cover Burkina Faso, Ghana, Senegal and Niger, is
one of four regional hubs worldwide, funded by the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) and the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID).
"The model is demand driven," said Irwin, who describes SERVIR's vision
as "connecting space to village". NASA performed a study in the region
two years ago and found that governments either did not have good data,
or were not using it, he added.
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The Sahel is one of the most vulnerable regions in the world to climate
change, where rising temperatures and increasingly erratic rainfall are
wreaking havoc on farmers, disrupting food production, and fuelling
widespread hunger and malnutrition.
"The whole livelihood along the Sahel depends on a few main crops,
namely millet and sorghum," U.N. World Food Program analyst Matthieu
Tockert told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"These crops are highly dependent on rainfall, so any data that allows
for proper forecasts is key," Tockert said.
Farmers in Senegal say that traditional methods of predicting the
weather are no longer reliable. A program launched last month by the
country's aviation and meteorology agency aims to solve the problem by
sending texts to farmers.
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Tourists take pictures of a NASA sign at the Kennedy Space Center
visitors complex in Cape Canaveral, Florida April 14, 2010.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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"There is an immediate need to connect available science and
technology to development solutions in West Africa," said Alex
Deprez, director of USAID's West Africa regional office.
In East Africa, SERVIR scientists have since 2008 built a system to
track water in streams and rivers and predict when and where
droughts or floods will occur, and created maps that show which land
is the most fertile, and which areas risk erosion.
SERVIR could adopt similar programmes in West Africa, but the first
step will be to identify the region's most pressing needs, with a
priority on improving food security, Irwin said.
(Reporting by Nellie Peyton, Editing by Kieran Guilbert and Katie
Nguyen.)
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