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ESA Prepares Biomass Satellite for Launch to Map Global Forests in 3D

Set to launch on a Vega-C rocket from Kourou, the satellite will provide critical data on forest biomass to enhance climate models and inform carbon cycle research.

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Overview

  • The Biomass satellite, developed by the European Space Agency (ESA), is in final preparations for its launch from French Guiana on a Vega-C rocket next week.
  • Equipped with a novel P-band radar, the satellite will create high-precision, three-dimensional maps of forest biomass by penetrating tree canopies and reaching the forest floor.
  • The mission aims to address uncertainties in the global carbon cycle by measuring forest carbon storage and emissions, crucial for improving climate projections.
  • Over its 5.5-year mission, Biomass will conduct six global mapping campaigns, producing a new forest map approximately every nine months.
  • The mission, with a budget of nearly €500 million, marks the culmination of two decades of development and will be operated from ESA's control center in Darmstadt, Germany.