You can find more posts on climate change science, policy, and news on Climate 411.
Have you ever spent time scrolling through NASA's image gallery? Some of the pictures are absolutely mesmerizing. I particularly like "Blue Marble" (below the fold), which was stitched together using satellite data.
Satellites provide more than pretty pictures, though. Our ability to understand and predict climate change depends on continuous high-quality satellite data.
Unfortunately, this critical data stream is threatened by budget cuts and lack of political support. In 2005, the National Academies assessed the situation and deemed it "alarming". Three years later, the outlook has not improved.
Follow me over the fold to learn more about why this is important, how this critical resource is threatened, and what the next administration needs to do about it.
What Satellites Can Tell Us
Here are just a few examples of the indispensible role satellites play in climate science. Satellites have provided a way to:
• Confirm that global warming is not caused by changes in solar energy or in Earth's reflectivity.
• Monitor and verify changes in deforestation emissions (key to any plan to reduce deforestation in developing countries).
• Track ice sheet melting and sea level rise.
• Predict and track storms and floods (important for issuing short-term warnings and understanding long-term trends).
• Improve accuracy of climate models in simulating atmospheric temperature trends, the effects of aerosol pollution, and more.
But crucial information like this may not be available in the future. Many planned satellite missions have been delayed, pared down, or cancelled due to budget cuts. For example, sensors that would have measured important climate-related variables such as solar irradiance, aerosols, and sea level have been removed from the upcoming National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System.
Existing satellites don't last forever, so these cutbacks put long-term records at risk, precisely when we need all the information we can get about climate change and its effects.
We Need Funding for Satellites
The National Academies Press has published several reports (here, here, and here) proposing short-term solutions that would avoid gaps in crucial datasets. But what we really need is a long-term commitment to a unified, high-quality Earth observation program.
This issue is so pressing that it was highlighted in a recent editorial in the journal Nature, which called on the next U.S. president to make Earth observation a priority. As Nature put it:
Providing for continuous high-quality climate data would be a substantial legacy, serving the interests of both U.S. citizens and the rest of the world for decades to come.
You can find a lot more posts about climate change science, policy, and news on Environmental Defense Fund's climate blog, Climate 411.