Related EU Projects
Results for action: Remote sensing for agricultural water demand
Acronym: REC/645642 Email: + 34 93 350 55 08 | Institution: isardSAT Barcelona The lack of sustainable water use is a growing concern in Europe. Nowadays, the agricultural sector imposes a high pressure on water resources, especially in Mediterranean countries, where irrigation can represent up to 80% of the consumptive uses of water. Increasing water use efficiency in agriculture has been thus identified as one of the key themes relating to water scarcity and drought. It now becomes necessary to improve on-farm irrigation management by adjusting irrigation to crop water requirements along the growing season. The methodology relies on the coupling between a surface model representing the water fluxes at the land surface atmosphere interface (infiltration, evaporation, transpiration) and in soil (drainage); and remote sensing data composed of land surface temperature, and near-surface soil moisture retrieved from microwave radiometers and radars. These estimates will be integrated in an irrigation management system that will be used to trigger irrigation. In addition, these estimates will allow making an impact assessment of the consumptive use of water and water footprint. Periodic Reporting for period 1 - REC (Root zone soil moisture Estimates at the daily and agricultural parcel scales for Crop irrigation management and water use impact – a multi-sensor remote sensing approach) - http://cordis.europa.eu/result/rcn/203540_en.html
Project LIFE Concrete Action: Remote sensing for agricultural water demand
Project Duration: 01-03-2015 to 28-02-2019
Project Status: Ongoing
Funding Program: H2020-EU.1.3.3. - Stimulating innovation by means of cross-fertilisation of knowledge
Key Contacts:
Project Summary:
Modern irrigation agencies rely on in situ root zone soil moisture measurements to detect the onset of crop water stress and to trigger irrigations. However, in situ point measurements are generally not available over extended areas and may not be representative at the field scale. Remote sensing can potentially provide cost-effective techniques for monitoring broad areas as there are currently no algorithms dedicated to monitor root zone soil moisture at the parcel scale.
REC proposes a solution to the need of root-zone soil moisture at the crop scale for irrigation management. It is based on an innovative operational algorithm that will allow for the first time to:
1) Map root zone soil moisture on a daily basis at the field scale; and
2) Quantitatively evaluate the different components of the water budget at the field scale from readily available remote sensing data.
Descriptive Words: Agriculture Remote sensing
Project Website: http://rec.isardsat.com/
Key Deliverables/Publications:
Close
Acronym: IMAGINES/ 311766 Name: Dr. Roselyne Lacaze | Email: rl@hygeos.com | Institution: HYGEOS, France The innovative IMAGINES project has developed activities to support the operations of the Copernicus Global Land Service (CGLS), and prepared the use of the Sentinels missions’ data in an operational context. The main objectives of IMAGINES were to: (i) improve the retrieval of basic biophysical variables (Terrestrial Essential Climate Variables), mainly Leaf Area Index (LAI), Fraction of Absorbed Photosynthetically Active Radiation (FAPAR) and surface albedo, by merging the information coming from different sensors (PROBA-V and Landsat-8) in view to prepare the use of Sentinel missions’ data; (ii) develop qualified software able to process multi-sensor data at the global scale on a fully automatic basis; (iii) complement and contribute to existing or future agricultural services by providing new data streams relying upon an original method to assess the above-ground biomass, based on the assimilation of satellite products in a Land Data Assimilation System (LDAS) in order to monitor the crop/fodder biomass production together with the carbon and water fluxes; (iv) demonstrate the added value of this contribution for a community of users acting at global, European, national, and regional scales. Moreover, IMAGINES has favoured the emergence of new downstream activities dedicated to the monitoring of crop and fodder production that are key for the implementation of the EU Common Agricultural Policy, the food security policy, and could contribute to the Global Agricultural Geo-Monitoring Initiative (GEOGLAM) coordinated by the intergovernmental Group on Earth Observations (GEO). IMAGINES has delivered the following deliverables: (i) operational processing lines interoperable with the existing CGLS infrastructure and able to run automatically at the global scale to generate global biophysical products disseminated by the CGLS (ii) regional high resolution biophysical variables derived from multi-sensor satellite data (iii) agricultural indicators, including the above-ground biomass, carbon and water fluxes, and drought indices resulting in the assimilation of the biophysical variables in the LDAS (iv) maps of crop group and crop types updated along the season (v) in situ measurements collected during 64 field campaigns over 23 different sites from 2013 to June 2016, resulting in 40 high resolution ground-based maps of LAI, FAPAR and FCover (http://www.fp7-imagines.eu/pages/services-and-products/ground-data.php) used, in the CGLS, for the validation of moderate resolution biophysical products. Better satellite technology helps read the ground more effectively - http://cordis.europa.eu/result/rcn/198785_en.html
Project LIFE Concrete Action: Remote sensing for agricultural water demand
Project Duration: 21/02/2013 – 30/06/2016
Project Status: Completed
Funding Program: FP7-SPACE
Key Contacts:
Project Summary:
Descriptive Words: Remote sensing Agriculture
Project Website: http://www.fp7-imagines.eu/
Key Deliverables/Publications:
Close
Acronym: EARTH2OBSERVE/603608 Name: Jaap Schellekens | Email: Jaap.Schellekens@deltares.nl | Institution: STICHTING DELTARES The project eartH2Observe brings together the findings from European Framework Programme (FP) projects DEWFORA, GLOWASIS, WATCH, GEOWOW and others. It has integrated available global earth observations (EO), in situ datasets and models and constructed a global water resources re-analysis dataset of significant length (several decades). The resulting data enabled improved insights on the full extent of available water and existing pressures on global water resources in all parts of the water cycle. The project supported efficient and globally consistent water management and decision making by providing comprehensive multi-scale (regional, continental and global) water resources observations. It has also tested new EO data sources, extended existing processing algorithms and combined data from multiple satellite missions in order to improve the overall resolution and reliability of EO data included in the re-analysis dataset. The usability and operational value of the developed data was verified and demonstrated in a number of case-studies across the world, which aimed to improve the efficiency of regional water distribution. The case-studies were conducted together with local end-users and stakeholders. Regions of interest cover multiple continents, a variety of hydrological, climatological and governance conditions and differ in the degree of data richness (e.g. the Mediterranean and Baltic region, Ethiopia, Colombia, Australia, New Zealand and Bangladesh). The data was disseminated through an open data Water Cycle Integrator portal to ensure an increased availability of global water resources information on both regional and global scale. The data portal was the European contributor to the existing GEOSS water cycle platforms and communities. Project results were actively disseminated using a combination of traditional methods (workshops, papers, website and conferences) and novel methods such as E-learning courses and webinars that promote the use of the developed dataset. Periodic Report Summaries: Periodic Summary Report 1 - http://cordis.europa.eu/result/rcn/176873_en.html Periodic Summary Report 2 – http://cordis.europa.eu/result/rcn/201682_en.html Dissemination material: Leaflet number 1 - http://cordis.europa.eu/docs/results/603/603608/periodic1-e2o_leaflet-no1_en_web.pdf Newsletter issue 1 - Link Newsletter issue 2 - Link Publications: Public Deliverables: D2.2 – Review Report on European Policies - Link D2.3 – Review Report on stakeholders and relevant policies in non-European case study river basins - Link D2.4 – Gap analysis of data requirements in support of European policies - Link D2.5 – Gap analysis of input data requirements in support of decision making of water allocation in (transboundary) basins - Link D2.6 – Report on global scale assessment of physical and social water scarcity - Link D3.1 – Inventory of Earth Observation datasets - Link D3.2 – Draft Report on EO Datasets - Link D3.3 – Release 1 of EO datasets - Link D3.4 – Report of the Joint Workshop on WPs 3-4-5-6 - Link D3.6 – Release 2 of EO Datasets - Link D4.1 – Documentation on the baseline performance of the v1 E2O data - Link D4.2 – Report on precipitation error modeling and ensemble error propagation using LSM and GHM models - Link D5.1 – Report on the current state-of-the-art Water Resources Reanalysis (WRR1-tier 1) - Link
Project LIFE Concrete Action: Remote sensing for agricultural water demand
Project Duration: 01-01-2014 to 31-12-2017
Project Status: Completed
Funding Program: FP7-ENVIRONMENT
Key Contacts:
Project Summary:
Descriptive Words: Earth Observation water
Project Website: http://www.earth2observe.eu
Key Deliverables/Publications:
D8.7 – Policy Brief No. 1 -Link
Close
Acronym: WATPLAN/262949 Name: Prof.Dr. W.G.M. Bastiaanssen | Email: w.bastiaanssen@waterwatch.nl | Institution: WaterWatch B.V., Netherlands Equitable and efficient water management and allocation, especially across country borders, needs accurate information on the use and availability of water resources in space and time. An operational monitoring system that covered the Incomati River Basin helped in fulfilling the need for transparency by providing quantified information on water use. Rainfall is another important parameter within the project and is derived by combining microwave data from the FEWS-NET sensor with in situ rainfall data measured using low cost meteorology stations installed as part of the project. These data products provide valuable insight in various aspects of the water balance important for water management. Such aspects include the distribution of renewable water resources, crop yield and water productivity. For instance, these data products can be used by technical committees and agencies, irrigation boards and farmers and also for water accounting. Water accounting contributes to better water allocation, verification of water use and sustainable utilisation of scarce water resources. Final Report - http://cordis.europa.eu/docs/results/262949/final1-watplan-final-report.pdf
Project LIFE Concrete Action: Remote sensing for agricultural water demand
Project Duration: 01/02/2011 – 31/08/2013
Project Status: Completed
Funding Program: FP7-SPACE
Key Contacts:
Project Summary:
The “Spatial Earth Observation Monitoring for Planning and Water Allocation in the International Incomati Basin project” - or WatPLAN – set up such an operational monitoring system. This joint European Union-Africa GMES earth observation project combines earth observation and in situ data to provide near-real time quantified information at field scale on (agricultural) water need and consumption.
The joint efforts of a consortium of international Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and universities have resulted in a unique operational monitoring system that is capable of providing weekly quantified information at field scale by using the Surface Energy Balance Algorithm for Land (SEBAL) model. This model has been applied and evaluated in more than 30 countries including many African countries. The energy balance describes how solar energy is distributed; part is reflected or absorbed by the surface, and part is used for plant growth. These components of the energy balance can be derived from satellite data using the model to quantify an important component of the water cycle - Evapotranspiration (ET). Subsequently, biomass production, actual-, and potential water consumption, and water deficit are derived on a pixel-by-pixel basis.
Descriptive Words: Earth Observation
Project Website: https://www.watplan.com/
Key Deliverables/Publications:
Close
Acronym: ENORASIS/282949 Name: Dr. Machi Simeonidou | Email: msimeonidou@draxis.gr | Institution: DRAXIS ENVIRONMENTAL S.A., Greece In light of the real need to practically improve the environmental performance of irrigation systems and to prevent the misuse of water, ENORASIS project developed an intelligent irrigation Decision Support System (ENORASIS Service Platform and Components), which enables sustainable irrigation management for farmers and water management organizations. ENORASIS is a server-based system that gathers data from satellite observations and field equipment (wireless sensor networks), that uses the next-generation weather prediction model Weather Research and Forecasting Model (WRF) to provide high spatial accuracy estimations for precipitation. It combines all this information with specific crop characteristics (using FAO56 model) to produce daily optimal irrigation advice that is communicated to farmers via web or mobile. Accordingly, farmers may use this real-time information to schedule irrigation activities also in interaction with other cultivation tasks and monitor water consumption both in terms of quantity and cost. Water Management Authorities may use water consumption monitoring data to estimate short and long term pressures on water reservoirs, set water prices as drivers for sustainable irrigation and apply pricing schemes that incorporate the real costs of water (in accordance with the Water Framework Directive - WFD). The project has achieved the development of the ENORASIS platform and other components (such as the Meteo Analysis Tool, Wireless Sensor Network - WSN, Digital Signature Standard - DSS algorithm). In addition, interfaces with billing systems and the relative subsystems and functionalities were also developed. Web and mobile ENORASIS users’ interfaces and Geographic Information System (GIS) application of ENORASIS were prepared, with a friendly, easy-to-use layout targeted to end-users’ needs. The ENORASIS system has been tested for 2 cultivation periods in 5 pilot implementations covering 9 different crops, 4 different climatic conditions and 2 operational approaches. The performance of pilots was validated and assessed against specific Key Performance Indicators. Four policy workshops, three scientific ones and a final conference have been organised with around 500 participants in total, accomplishing proper dissemination of the project and its results and contributing to policy dialogue about sustainable irrigation management in Europe. Dissemination material: ENORASIS 1st Info Factsheet - Link ENORASIS 1st Newsletter - Link ENORASIS A1 Poster first presented in STEP-WISE and STREAM Final Conference - Link ENORASIS 2nd Info Factsheet - Link ENORASIS 3rd Info Factsheet - Link ENORASIS 4th Info Factsheet - Link ENORASIS 2nd Newsletter - Link ENORASIS 3rd Newsletter - Link ENORASIS 4th Newsletter - Link ENORASIS 5th Newsletter - Link Project Deliverables: D1.2 Agricultural Process Analysis Report – Link D2.1 Report on Irrigation Water Governance in the context of WFD and CAP - Link D2.2 ENORASIS Business Models - Link D2.3 ENORASIS Platform Use Case Scenarios and User Requirements - Link D5.2 ENORASIS User Manual - Link D5.3 ENORASIS Technical Documentation - Link D6.1 Pilot Implementation Guidelines - Link D6.2 Pilots' Interim Report - Link D6.3 Pilots' Final Report - Link D6.4 Pilots Assessment Report - Link D7.4 Report on ENORASIS Events (scientific/ policy workshops) - Link D7.5 Report on ENORASIS Events (final conference) - Link D7.14 Policy Recommendations for Decision Makers and Water Management Organisations (Policy brief) - Link
Project LIFE Concrete Action: Remote sensing for agricultural water demand
Project Duration: January 2012- December 2014
Project Status: Completed
Funding Program: FP7-ENVIRONMENT
Key Contacts:
Project Summary:
Descriptive Words: Remote sensing Agriculture
Project Website: http://www.enorasis.eu/
Key Deliverables/Publications:
Close