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News The Dragon Programme's architect - interview with José Achache
This last week saw the start of the Dragon Programme: a landmark Earth Observation initiative between Europe and China. Fresh from attending its kick-off symposium, ESA Earth Observation Director José Achache shared his views on the start of the Programme he originated, and the benefits it promises to bring all participants. More than a hundred leading European and Chinese scientists gathered at the island city of Xiamen for three days starting 27 April. They have formed joint Sino-European teams to investigate a range of thematic areas across the three-year life of the Dragon Programme.
Research subjects include agricultural and forest monitoring, water resource assessment, terrain measurement, desertification, the ocean environment, atmospheric chemistry and climate change.
"However maintaining the overall cohesion of the Programme is important, and for this purpose we have agreed to set up a co-ordinating committee made up of ten top-level European and Chinese scientists.
ESA is supplying data from Envisat and other spacecraft on the 9.6 million square kilometres of Chinese territory – the country is the third largest in the world. To help picture its vast scale, China's total surface area approximates that of Sedna, the newly discovered planetary body at the fringe of our solar system.
"There are a multitude of issues where Earth Observation has the potential to aid Chinese management of the territory they deal with, including development planning, resource mapping and especially the mitigation of natural hazards.
His own past experience also played a role in inspiring Dragon, Achache added: "Two decades ago I worked on a joint French-Chinese geophysical survey of the Tibetan Plateau, and found that a very rewarding experience. Encouraging similar research links between Europe and China within the area of Earth Observation is useful in its own right.
"China is at least as advanced as we are in spheres such as e-governance. For example, Xiamen where the symposium took place is regional capital of a fast-growing Special Economic Zone. We had demonstrated to us a geographical information system designed for the city helping to manage its expansion, integrating all relevant information, satellite along with data gathered in-situ.
"So Dragon is going to be more than a one-way transfer of scientific knowledge. Considering it in terms of capacity building, I think it clear that Europe will gain capacity as operational services developed in China go back the other way."
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