Visualization of total carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere in 2021 NASA
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Administrator Michael Regan, and other United States government leaders
unveiled the U.S. Greenhouse Gas Center Monday during the 28th annual United
Nations Climate Conference (COP28).
“NASA data is essential to making
the changes needed on the ground to protect our climate. The U.S. Greenhouse
Gas Center is another way the Biden-Harris Administration is working to make
critical data available to more people – from scientists running data analyses,
to government officials making decisions on climate policy, to members of the
public who want to understand how climate change will affect them,” said
Nelson. “We’re bringing space to Earth to benefit communities across the
country.”
The U.S. Greenhouse Gas Center will serve as a hub for collaboration between
agencies across the U.S. government as well as non-profit and private sector
partners. Data, information, and computer models from observations from
the International Space Station, various satellite and airborne missions, and
ground stations are available online.
As the lead implementing agency of
the center, NASA partnered with the EPA, National Institute of Standards and
Technology, and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Science
experts from each of these U.S. federal agencies curated this catalog of
greenhouse gas datasets and analysis tools.
“A goal of the U.S. Greenhouse Gas
Center is to accelerate the collaborative use of Earth science data,” said
Argyro Kavvada, center program manager at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
“We’re working to get the right data into the hands of people who can use it to
manage and track greenhouse gas emissions.”
The center’s data catalog includes
a curated collection of data sets that provide insights into greenhouse gas
sources, sinks, emissions, and fluxes. Initial information in the center
website is focused on three areas:
- Estimates of greenhouse
gas emissions from human activities
- Naturally occurring
greenhouse gas sources and sinks on land and in the ocean.
- Large methane emission
event identification and quantification, leveraging aircraft and
space-based data
An example of a dataset is the
methane gas information detected by NASA’s EMIT (Earth Surface Mineral Dust
Source Investigation) mission. Located on the International Space Station, EMIT
is an imaging spectrometer that measures light in visible and infrared
wavelengths and thus can measure release of methane on Earth.
Built on open-source principles,
the U.S. Greenhouse Gas Center’s datasets, related algorithms, and supporting
code are fully open sourced. This allows anyone to test the data, algorithms,
and results. The center also includes user support and an analysis hub for
users to perform advanced data analysis with computational resources and an
interactive, visual interface for storytelling. NASA encourages feedback and
ideas on the center’s evolution. The center is part of a broader administration
effort to enhance greenhouse gas information, outlined in the recently
released National Strategy to Advance an Integrated U.S. Greenhouse Gas
Measurement, Monitoring, and Information System.
For more information on NASA, visit: https://www.nasa.gov
Source: NASA, Partners Launch US Greenhouse Gas Center to Share Climate Data - NASA
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