Screen grab of OpenForis |
New Google-powered
software will help the world tackle problems related to climate change,
deforestation and food production, a United Nations agency said on Friday, as
it presented its revamped online platform.
Reuters
report continues:
OpenForis, U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) software, uses
high-resolution satellite images to monitor the environment and changes in land
use and forest cover.
"We
make maps that used to take three years in a week," Erik Lindquist,
forestry officer at FAO, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"Rather
than preparing data to analyze we can spend time probing the data for answers.
We're getting to answers much more quickly," he said on the sidelines of a
global forest conference in Rome.
Lindquist
said the software was free to use by anyone, from citizens who want to monitor
misuse of natural resources to scientists or governments wanting to assess the
carbon storage capacity of an area.
"There's
a lot of uncertainty surrounding the total forest area in the word, how much
forest is being lost and gained, how is the land use changing and what are the
effects on carbon emissions," Lindquist said.
"The
more we use these tools the more we're going to be sure of whether the
situation is improving or getting worse."
The
software can also be deployed to inspect water resources and even evaluate
locations for refugee camps based on availability of firewood for cooking, he
said.
Earlier this month, medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières launched the MapSwipe app, which also uses satellite images and allows users to map remote, rural regions vulnerable to humanitarian crises.
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