Abstract

This paper presents the results of research designed to explore the challenges involved in the use of Earth Observation (EO) data to support environmental management Brazil. While much has been written about the technology and applications of EO, the perspective of end-users of EO data and their needs has been under-explored in the literature. A total of 53 key informants in Brasilia and the cities of Rio Branco and Cuiaba were interviewed regarding their current use and experience of EO data and the expressed challenges that they face. The research builds upon a conceptual model which illustrates the main steps and limitations in the flow of EO data and information for use in the management of land use and land cover (LULC) in Brazil. The current paper analyzes and ranks, by relative importance, the factors that users identify as limiting their use of EO. The most important limiting factor for the end-user was the lack of personnel, followed by political and economic context, data management, innovation, infrastructure and IT, technical capacity to use and process EO data, bureaucracy, limitations associated with access to high-resolution data, and access to ready-to-use product. In general, users expect to access a ready-to-use product, transformed from the raw EO data into usable information. Related to this is the question of whether this processing is best done within an organization or sourced from outside. Our results suggest that, despite the potential of EO data for informing environmental management in Brazil, its use remains constrained by its lack of suitably trained personnel and financial resources, as well as the poor communication between institutions.

Highlights

  • It has been demonstrated that Earth Observation (EO) via satellites provides a useful tool to monitor, report, and verify the management of sustainable land use and land cover (LULC) in tropical forests [1]

  • The main reported uses of EO data in this research were for agricultural forecasting, disaster management, land-use planning, environmental management, and monitoring deforestation in the Amazon region

  • The main conclusions of this research are as follows: 1. The main limitation for wider use of EO data and information is a lack of skilled personnel linked with financial constraints associated with the current political and economic situation of Brazil

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Summary

Introduction

It has been demonstrated that Earth Observation (EO) via satellites provides a useful tool to monitor, report, and verify the management of sustainable land use and land cover (LULC) in tropical forests [1]. Since 1973, the Brazilian Institute for Space Research (INPE) has been monitoring deforestation in the Amazon forest by using Landsat EO data [4]. Since 1988, INPE has assessed the annual deforestation rates via the Amazon Deforestation Monitoring Project (PRODES), a leading example of operational monitoring to quantify land-cover change via EO data [4,5,6]. The information derived from PRODES and DETER is widely used by different agencies to verify deforestation and land use changes in the Amazon [10,11,12]. Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon, defined as clear cutting and conversion of the original forest cover to other land uses [13], reduced from 7893 km2/annum in 2016 to 6947 km2/annum in 2017, but increased to 7536 and 10,129 km2/annum, respectively, in 2018 and 2019 [14]

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