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Brussels, 19 March 2002
Key words : EU space policy, space applications,
GMES, security, environment
Philippe
Busquin, Research Commissioner and responsible for space policy,
opened the first meeting of the GMES Steering Committee in Brussels
today. This meeting gathered, for the first time, the users and
suppliers of GMES services and technologies. The steering committee
will assist in the implementation of the EU's Action Plan on Global
Monitoring of Environment and Security (GMES). The goal set by the
European Union is to develop by 2008 an operational and autonomous
European global monitoring capability for environmental and security
purposes.
GMES is an initiative to federate Europe's disparate
activities in satellite observation and remote sensing, in support
of Community policies. Currently, space data for information on
environment and security is derived largely from experimental satellite
systems that are national or bilateral among Member States. GMES
seeks better to exploit Europe's existing and planned capabilities
and infrastructures, and to develop mechanisms for collecting and
distributing data that help Europe realise its policy goals in various
fields, such as environment, development co-operation, civil protection,
the fight against fraud, etc. GMES is a key item of the Aeronautics
and Space priority in the Community's Sixth Research Framework Programme
(2002 - 2006). Concrete applications include such activities as
monitoring the global environment, detecting natural catastrophes,
managing mass movements of refugees, etc.
As Philippe Busquin noted: "At their summit in Barcelona
last weekend, the Heads of State and Government reaffirmed the Union's
ambition to become the most competitive knowledge-based economy
in the world and to invest in the creation of knowledge and technologies.
We have first-rate science and space technologies in Europe. We
must put them to greater and better use to help us meet the challenges
of our globalising society. GMES is not only of strategic importance
for space research, it will also help Europe to better project its
values and policies in the world, for example to ensure sustainable
development."
Participants in the steering committee included senior representatives
from ESA and the European Commission, as well as the European Council,
Member States, the European Environment Agency, EUMETSAT and other
key players in the area of space security and environment.
GMES and GALILEO are two pillars of the EU's space policy, developed
jointly by the European Commission and the European Space Agency.
This meeting represents an additional step in building Europe's
Space Policy. It follows the successful launch on 1 March of ENVISAT
(the largest earth observation satellite ever built and a key component
of GMES). It also precedes by a few days the formal adoption of
the GALILEO space navigation programme by EU transport Ministers.
BACKGROUND
A key priority of the GMES initiative is to develop innovative,
user-driven applications and services in the separate but complementary
areas of global monitoring of environment and security. Combining
space, land-based and airborne technologies, GMES will help develop
innovative tools and applications in order to assist decision and
policy makers at the European, national and even local level.
Natural and man-made disasters take a staggering toll in economic
and human terms:
- Damages from floods in France in 1999: € 500 million
- Average yearly costs from floods in the US: US$ 1.8 billion;
from storms: US$ 1.8 billion.
- Cost of one single ecological disaster, the Amoco-Cadiz: €
9.3 billion.
- Costs in human life: 665 000 people killed over the last decade
by natural disasters.
GMES, a joint initiative of the European Commission and of The
European Space Agency will play an important role in responding
to such disasters. Combining data from ENVISAT and from other terrestrial,
aerial and seaborne observation systems, GMES will allow European
researchers, private companies and public authorities to better
monitor climate change, track environmental pollution, and react
to emergencies. It will also have a key role in the safety and security
areas. In particular, it should help optimise maritime traffic and
other forms of transportation, improve cross-border response to
catastrophic events, follow movements of refugees, and facilitate
the distribution of food and medical aid.
At the global level, GMES will provide new verification tools to
contribute to the precise monitoring of the implementation of international
protocols, such as the Kyoto protocol on climate change, as well
as security and international aid agreements. At the other end of
the spectrum, GMES will help local authorities to pinpoint problems
(e.g. shoreline erosion) and better react to catastrophic events
(e.g. floods, mudslides, avalanches, forest fires). At EU level,
beyond environment and security, GMES will provide new objective
data to support of a broad range of Community policies - notably
regional development, transport, agriculture, enlargement, development,
and foreign policy etc. In all these areas, the 6th Framework Programme
will bring players together, combine their needs and federate their
efforts..
This ambitious programme aims at consolidating a European capability
in a sector where Europe depends on data provided from third sources.
The development of a GMES infrastructure composed of a constellation
of satellites also represents a significant opportunity for the
aerospace industry
GMES PRIORITIES AND ORGANISATIONAL ASPECTS
Among the priorities of the "Initial Period" of GMES will
be to deliver pilot information products and services on priority
environment and security topics, to assess current capabilities,
and to define future systems infrastructure.
The GMES Steering Committee, established in Brussels on 19 March
2002, and made up of senior representatives of the different stakeholders,
will drive the GMES initiative and assist in the implementation
of the EU's GMES Action Plan. Additionally, a high level GMES Forum
willl foster an on-going dialogue between all parties involved in
the use, monitoring and information production for environment and
security policies
NOTES FOR EDITORS:
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