DLC announces commitment towards funding UN-SPIDER agenda in Africa for the next 10 years

The German Aerospace Center (DLR) have announced the commitment to continue their support to the UN-SPIDER Office in Bonn for the next 10 years with a particular focus on Africa. This announcement was made at the UN-OOSA High Level Forum meeting taking place in Bonn 13-16 November in Bonn, Germany.
Dr.-Ing. Walther Pelzer (DLR) furthermore expressed the appreciation of the work carried out by UN-OOSA in general and the UN-SPIDER activities in particular. Mr. Niklas Hedman on behalf of the Office of Outer Space Affairs thanked the DLR and in his turn acknowledged the strong relationship with DLR over the past decade. Mr. Juan-Carlos Villagran as Head of the UN-SPIDER Office in Bonn stated

The International Expert Meeting is organized by the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, through its United Nations Platform for Space-based Information for Disaster Management and Emergency Response (UN-SPIDER), and the German Aerospace Center DLR. The event takes place in cooperation with the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy BMWi. and with the support of the Center for Remote Sensing of Land Surfaces (ZFL) of the University of Bonn.

Disasters cause tremendous damage to societies around the world. They lead to loss of lives and property, displace people from their homes and destroy livelihoods, and disrupt sustainable development efforts worldwide. Developing countries are particularly susceptible to the impact of natural hazards as societies are more vulnerable and exposed, and less resilient to recover when disasters strike.

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 highlight the interaction between sustainable development and disasters and call on stakeholders to “build the resilience of the poor and those in vulnerable situations and reduce their exposure and to climate-related extreme events and other economic, social and environmental shocks and disasters.” This assessment is echoed by the 2004 Africa Regional Strategy for Disaster Risk Reduction, which guides efforts in this area on the continent and underlines that “disaster impacts have become an impediment to sustainable development in Africa”.

The ever-increasing availability and volume of data resulting from Earth observation satellites, social media, crowdsourced geographic information, virtual globes and ubiquitous web repositories, among other, can be analyzed and combined to generate insights into disaster risks and emergency situations and support evidence-based decision-making for emergencies and sustainable development.

The benefits of using big data approaches in synergy with space-based information for early warning, risk mapping and in disaster management have also been recognized in the Sendai Framework. The Sendai Framework calls for the use of satellite technologies, space-based information and big data applications at national and local levels as well as for regional and international cooperation to facilitate the use of such technologies. Space and big data technologies are already, and will be even more so in the future, important elements in early warning systems (EWS), which are central to effective disaster preparedness and feature prominently in the Sendai Framework as well as in the Paris Agreement.

The UN-SPIDER International Expert Meeting addresses these topics by bringing together around 45 experts from space agencies, civil protection authorities, development cooperation actors, international organizations, technical relief and humanitarian aid providers, national ministries and the private sector.

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