NOAA 03-079
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Bob Hopkins
6/24/03
NOAA News Releases 2003
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U.S., EUROPEAN SATELLITE AGENCIES SIGN COOPERATION, DATA-SHARING ACCORD
New Agreement Builds on Partnership to Provide Enhanced Earth Observing Capabilities

Darmstadt, Germany - Europe's Meteorological Satellite Organization (EUMETSAT) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) today signed the Joint Transition Activities Regarding Polar-Orbiting Operational Environment Satellite Systems Agreement at EUMETSAT Headquarters in Darmstadt, Germany. The signing highlighted the continuation of the relationship between two of the world’s leading Earth observation organizations at the heart of a combined European-US collaboration. NOAA is an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce.

In a signing ceremony, retired U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator, and Dr. Tillmann Mohr, EUMETSAT’s director-general, signed the Agreement at the time of the 53rd Council of EUMETSAT. The agreement will ensure the ongoing delivery of vital environmental data well into the second decade of the twenty-first century.

Vice Admiral Lautenbacher and Dr. Mohr also signed an Agreement for Access to Data from the Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) satellites. This agreement is a follow-on to the 1995 agreement between EUMETSAT and NOAA, which granted NOAA and its official U.S. affiliates, access to METEOSAT data. The current MSG agreement will allow NOAA and its official U.S. affiliates access to the new products available from the MSG satellite that was launched in August of 2002.

“The NOAA-EUMETSAT partnership is a model for international cooperation and coordination in building an integrated and sustained global Earth observing system,” Lautenbacher said. “As we prepare for the Earth Observing Summit on July 31 in Washington, this Agreement sets the stage to engage our international partners in this important endeavour.”

“By putting in place this long-term agreement we can ensure that citizens of every country of our remarkable planet will continue to benefit from the most accurate, safe and reliable operational Earth observations for weather and environmental forecasting,” said Dr. Mohr. “This collaboration will also continue NOAA and EUMETSAT’s contributions to the space-based component of the Global Observing System operated under the auspices of the World Meteorological Organization.”

Through the Joint Transition Activities (JTA) Agreement EUMETSAT and NOAA:

  • Agree on the provision of instruments from the U.S. for Metop-3, the third satellite of the EUMETSAT Polar System (EPS) Program. This will be operated in the 2014 timeframe as a continuation of the European contribution to the Initial Joint Polar System (IJPS). The IJPS is the partnership between Europe and the United States, under an agreement signed in November 1998 between NOAA and EUMETSAT and covers the first two satellites of EPS and the last two NOAA Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellites (POES) (NOAA N and NOAA N’). NOAA N is expected to launch in 2004 and Metop-1 is expected to launch in 2005. EUMETSAT’s Metop satellites will fly in the morning orbit, while NOAA’s satellites NOAA N and N’ will fly in the afternoon orbit.
  • Agree to exchange data and data products from the Metop-3 satellite and the U.S. National Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS), which is expected to become operational in 2009. The US NPOESS program is a joint program among DoD, NASA and NOAA to replace NOAA’s POES and DoD’s DMSP polar-orbiting satellites.
  • Reaffirm their commitment to define a future joint polar system, with the intention of signing a Joint Polar System Agreement by 2011 (Article 5).
  • Set a range of initiatives to be jointly undertaken to prepare for a future joint polar system in order to ensure the continuity of polar-orbiting satellite data provision to the World Meteorological community (Article 4) into the third decade of the 21st Century.

“This agreement sets a strong precedent for the free and open exchange of data that will be critical to a successful Earth observing system,” Lautenbacher added. “This collaboration will also be vital to meet existing requirements and anticipate the future data needs of meteorological organizations worldwide. We look forward to working with EUMETSAT and its European members in achieving our common vision for a comprehensive Earth observing system that will enhance our ability to understand and manage our shared global environmental systems and resources.”

“EUMETSAT and NOAA have an established track record of working together to maintain operational Earth observation from space through our geo-stationary satellite programs, and, in particular, a backup agreement,” Dr. Mohr said. “Under this Agreement, EUMETSAT provided coverage over the Atlantic to support the US operations from 1991 to 1995. The cooperation in low Earth orbit satellites is a natural progression of the excellent understanding between the agencies. I look forward to further cooperation in other areas.”

“Better forecasting of meteorological phenomena and closer environmental monitoring cannot prevent meteorological disasters. However, with earlier and more specific warnings, people can better prepare themselves by putting in place environmental measures, and if necessary enhanced housing, construction and to minimise the harmful impact of extreme weather phenomena,” Dr. Mohr added.

NOAA and EUMETSAT have a history of successful collaborative Earth observation for meteorological purposes for more than 20 years. This enhanced partnership with NOAA is a first step in one of EUMETSAT’s newer objectives of climate monitoring and detection of climatic changes.

EUMETSAT established the EPS program, consisting of three Metop Satellites as a collaborative project between the European Space Agency (ESA) and EUMETSAT. ESA is undertaking the development of the first satellite.

Earth Observation Summit
The U.S. will host an Earth Observation Summit on July 31 in Washington, D.C. to bring together government ministers of the G-8 and other interested nations, as well as established international organizations such as EUMETSAT, as a step toward building an international, comprehensive, integrated and sustained Earth observation system. The summit will provide a chance to explore and discuss what is needed to commit on the political level to building a comprehensive, integrated and sustained observing system for the Earth. In addition to the Ministerial level meeting, the plan is to establish an international working group that will meet the next day. This group will begin development of an international ten-year plan for fielding a fully integrated system.

EUMETSAT
EUMETSAT is an intergovernmental organization that establishes and maintains operational meteorological satellites for 18 European States (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom). EUMETSAT also has four cooperating states (The Slovak Republic, Hungary, Poland and Croatia). Serbia and Montenegro, Slovenia and Romania will become Cooperative States in the near future. The images and the data from Meteosat make a significant contribution to weather forecasting and to the monitoring of the global climate. http://www.eumetsat.de.

NOAA
The U.S. Commerce Department’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is dedicated to enhancing economic security and national safety through the prediction and research of weather and climate-related events and providing environmental stewardship of our nation’s coastal and marine resources. To learn more about NOAA, please visit http://www.noaa.gov.