Abstract

• A big Earth data based impervious surface area extraction and update method was proposed. • Two global 10-m impervious surface area maps for 2015 and 2018 were generated. • Total area of global impervious surfaces increased from ∼ 1.27 to ∼ 1.29 million km 2. • Our products can accurately provide more spatial details at a finer resolution. • Our products will facilitate the Sustainable Development Goals related applications. The impervious surface area is a critical component of anthropogenic environment that can be utilized as a proxy for assessing urbanization sustainability. However, there remains a lack of global high-precision product of impervious surface area, especially in the arid and semi-arid regions, due to the difficulty of human settlement extraction from remote sensing data. The complexity and variability of human settlements makes it difficult to identify and delineate impervious surfaces by using a single data source or classifier. In this paper, we employed Sentinel-1 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and Sentinel-2 optical images, in conjunction with a range of ancillary datasets that were publicly available (such as nighttime light data and ecological zone information), to develop an accurate extraction and updating approach for global impervious surface area mapping across various geographical regions. We generated two high-resolution global impervious surface area (Hi-GISA) maps for 2015 and 2018 with the Google Earth Engine (GEE) platform. The resultant Hi-GISA maps not only provided a detailed distribution of human settlements in both urban and rural areas, but also helped quantitative change analysis in terms of both expansion and reduction. Conventionally, we randomly selected 3,980 and 4,354 blocks with a size of 300 m × 300 m for the respective datasets in 2015 and 2018, to compare the accuracy of our product with other products. The validation results show that the Hi-GISA data in in each year reached a R 2 higher than 0.8 and achieved a mean overall accuracy over 88%. The areal estimations demonstrated that global impervious surfaces rose from 1.27 million km 2 in 2015 to 1.29 million km 2 in 2018 with an increase of 20,000 km 2 . Nearly 80% of global impervious surfaces was contributed by 20 nations led by China, USA, and Russia. At the same time, South America had experienced the most significant growth (∼3.35%) among all continents, followed by Africa (∼2.59%). The Hi-GISA datasets provide new baseline products of global impervious surface area at 10 m resolution. These maps combined with other socioeconomic data could contribute to monitoring and analysis of the United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), in particular, SDG 11.1, 11.2, and 11.3, and would also be valuable in assessing other SDG targets related to “Sustainable cities and communities”. Further development of the Hi-GISA data with a longer time series could be potentially used to examine urban sprawl and its environmental impacts.

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