Directions Magazine
Hello. Login | Register

Press Releases

Home | Submit Press Release

Disaster Monitoring Constellation is awarded AIAA Space Systems accolade

Bookmark and Share
Thursday, September 13th 2012


 

Sir Martin Sweeting, Executive Chairman and founder of Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL), yesterday accepted the 2012 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Space Systems award for the Disaster Monitoring Constellation (DMC).
 
The award, which was presented at the AIAA Space 2012 conference and exhibition at the Pasadena Convention Center in California, recognises outstanding achievements in the architecture, analysis, design, and implementation of space systems. The DMC was nominated for the award by Dr. Jerry Sellers of Teaching Science and Technology, Inc. in Colorado for ‘being an unprecedented example of international cooperation in the application of space systems to the mitigation of human suffering.”  
 
Sir Martin said on receiving the award: ‘I’m delighted to accept this award recognising the formation of the international Disaster Monitoring Constellation now in its 10th year. The constellation is unique in its use of advanced microsatellites providing rapid response Earth imaging and has become an immense humanitarian asset; showing that in the competitive world of space, diverse countries can work together for the good of mankind’.
 
The DMC was conceived in 1998 and formally proposed in 2000 following the Vienna Declaration on Space and Human Development, which called specifically for the implementation of an integrated, global system to manage natural disaster mitigation, relief and prevention efforts through space activities. At that time, SSTL had lowered the price tag of Earth Observation satellites to the point where governments and organisations throughout the world could own an independent satellite. Sir Martin Sweeting and his team at SSTL recognised the potential of a multi-satellite constellation using these advanced small satellites to address disaster monitoring from space.
 
SSTL established the Disaster Monitoring Constellation with support from the former British National Space Centre (BNSC). The first satellite AlSat-1, was launched in 2002 and soon joined by UK-DMC, NigeriaSat-1 and BILSAT-1 in 2003 to form the original four-satellite constellation. The constellation has continued to evolve and innovate and today there are currently five active members of the DMC; UK (SSTL), Nigeria (NASRDA), Algeria (ASAL), China (BLMIT) and Spain (Deimos) that each own an independent satellite, but pool their resources for disaster and commercial imaging.
 
The SSTL subsidiary DMC International Imaging Ltd (DMCii) was established in 2004 to coordinate constellation imaging for humanitarian and commercial needs in partnership with the constellation members. DMCii works with the world’s Space Agencies and the United Nations (UN) under the International Charter for Space and Major Disasters to provide multi-spectral optical imagery during natural disasters and has assisted relief efforts for disasters such as Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the Wenchuan earthquake in 2008 and the Japanese Tsunami of 2011 – it has responded to more than 170 Charter requests for disaster imagery.
The cost effective DMC small satellites and shared infrastructure provided a springboard for countries such as Algeria and Nigeria to establish their national space programmes and harness Earth observation to map and monitor resources and their environment. By working together the constellation provides the ability to image any point in the world on a daily basis, which has proved equally valuable for disaster relief, agriculture and precision farming, or detecting illegal logging in the Amazon rainforest.
 
About SSTL
Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL) is the world's leading small satellite company, delivering operational space missions for a range of applications including Earth observation, science and communications. The Company designs, manufactures and operates high performance satellites and ground systems for a fraction of the price normally associated with space missions, with 500 staff working on turnkey satellite platforms, space-proven satellite subsystems and optical instruments.
 
Since 1981 SSTL has built and launched 39 satellites – as well as providing training and development programmes, consultancy services, and mission studies for ESA, NASA , international governments and commercial customers, with its innovative approach that is changing the economics of space.
 
In 2008 the Company set up a US subsidiary, Surrey Satellite Technology US LLC  (SST-US) with facilities in Denver, Colorado to address the United States market and its customers for the provision of small satellite solutions, applications and services. www.sst-us.com
 
Headquartered in Guildford, UK, SSTL is owned by Astrium, an EADS company.
Bookmark and Share

Stay Connected

Twitter RSS Facebook LinkedIn Delicious Apple Devices Android Blackberry






Recent Comments

More than Mapping: Using GIS for disaster management

The devastation of Hurricane Sandy and the western wildfires in 2012 are sobering reminders that utilities always need to be prepared to respond to large-scale natural disasters. When faced with incidents of that size, a utility is forced to look at all of its resources in preparation, including those it doesn’t typically utilize under normal conditions. Danny Petrecca, director of Product Management Enterprise GIS at Schneider Electric, explains how a...

Wyndham City Council Further Enhances its Residents Geographic Information with an Enterprise GIS Solution
GEOStore: New Web Marketing and Distribution Techniques for Geolocated Digital Content
Privatizing National Mapping Technology
Why Gartner’s Magic Quadrant Missed the Importance of Location Analytics to Business Intelligence
Western U.S. Disasters and Health & Air Quality: California Flames and Oregon Plains - NASA DEVELOP
Free as in Painstaking Cartography Labor
Search Across Many Data Sources From A Single Interface
How Important is Location in Location-based Advertising?

DirectionsMag.com

About Us | Advertise | Contact Us | Web Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy
© 2013 Directions Media. All Rights Reserved