Landsat's Critical Role in Responding to Natural Disasters
In 2011, natural disasters affected 206 million people worldwide, costing a record-setting 355 billion dollars. Fire, floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, and other natural disasters can be particularly tragic and costly when critical facilities such as power plants, airports, roads, and hospitals are threatened. When a disaster strikes, remote sensing is often the only way to get a big-picture view of what is happening on the ground. With its consistent, reliable, repeated observations of Earth’s changing surface, Landsat keeps a record of Earth’s land surfaces before and after disasters, serving as an essential tool for assessing risk, mapping the extent of damage, and planning post-disaster recovery. Landsat produces 185-kilometer-wide images with 30-meter resolution in visible and infrared wavelengths of light, making it possible to map impacts on the landscape in ways otherwise not visible to human sight. For example, Landsat sensors enable us to see the heat from fires both during and after the burns, and the lava flows from volcanic eruptions even when gaseous substances obscure the view to human eyes.
Assessing the Impact of Hurricanes on Puerto Rico’s Forests
Scientists at Berkeley Lab have produced a rapid mapping of the disturbance intensity across Puerto Rico’s forests with the help of Google Earth Engine and Landsat 8.
Near Real Time Monitoring of Volcanic Eruptions
Using Earth Observation data to monitor volcanic eruptions.
Puerto Rico Landscape Ravaged by Hurricane Maria
Hurricane Maria tore across Puerto Rico on September 20, 2017, ravaging both urban and rural areas with category 4 winds and intense rainfall for several days.
Hurricane Irma Turns Caribbean Islands Brown
Irma battered several Caribbean islands in September 2017; when the clouds cleared the destruction became obvious even from space.
Mapping Orinoco and Caroni River Floods in Venezuela
The Disaster Charter used Landsat 8 data to map flooding on the Orinoco and Caroni Rivers.
Landsat Helps Map Fires in Western and Southern Cape Provinces of South Africa
Landsat 8 data was used to map the fire extent, measuring some 16,000 hectares of destruction.