Abstract

Land consumption is the increase in artificial land cover, which is a major issue for environmental sustainability. In Italy, the Italian Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA) and National System for Environmental Protection (SNPA) have the institutional duty to monitor land consumption yearly, through the photointerpretation of high-resolution images. This study intends to develop a methodology in order to produce maps of land consumption, by the use of the semi-automatic classification of multitemporal images, to reduce the effort of photointerpretation in detecting real changes. The developed methodology uses vegetation indices calculated over time series of images and decision rules. Three variants of the methodology were applied to detect the changes that occurred in Italy between the years 2018 and 2019, and the results were validated using ISPRA official data. The results show that the produced maps include large commission errors, but thanks to the developed methodology, the area to be photointerpreted was reduced to 7300 km2 (2.4% of Italian surface). The third variant of the methodology provided the highest detection of changes: 70.4% of the changes larger than 100 m2 (the pixel size) and over 84.0% of changes above 500 m2. Omissions are mainly related to single pixel changes, while larger changes are detected by at least one pixel in most of the cases. In conclusion, the developed methodology can improve the detection of land consumption, focusing photointerpretation work over selected areas detected automatically.

Highlights

  • The methodology presented in this study uses Sentinel-1 GRD and Sentinel-2 images to automatically detect land cover changes caused by land consumption

  • The methodology was applied to the whole Italian territory, which covers about 80 Sentinel-2 tiles; the three approaches were performed in sequence as indicated in the previous section

  • This study developed a methodology to automatically detect land consumption, in order to ease and fasten the photointerpretation of actual changes in Italy that is performed by Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA)-SNPA

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Summary

Objectives

Objectives and TargetsTarget YearPrevent further degradation of soil, preserve its functions and restore degraded soil + integrate soil protection into relevant EU policies. Guidelines explicitly focus on limiting, mitigating and compensating for the effects of soil sealing.

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