Google: satellite platform to aid forest efforts

CANCUN, Mexico,  (Reuters) – Google Inc  unveiled  technology yesterday it says will help build trust between  rich and poor countries on projects designed to protect the  world’s tropical forests.

Measuring the success of forest-protection plans in places  like the Amazon, Indonesia and the Congo basin has always been  difficult because tree disease, corruption, and illegal logging  threaten vast remote areas that scientists can’t monitor by  land.

The future of the projects are important to global talks on  climate being held in Cancun for two weeks ending Dec. 10  because forest destruction is responsible for up to 17 percent  of mankind’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The platform, called Google Earth Engine, takes vast  amounts of forest images from U.S. and French satellites and  crunches it at shared data centers, through cloud computing. It  allows scientists to monitor forests from their own computers  in minutes or seconds instead of the hours or days it took  before.
Google also wants to eventually sell access to advanced  aspects of the tool to carbon traders, policy makers, and  researchers working in forestry.

Global deals among nations to protect forests have been  slowed by the lack of transparency and the failure of the  United States to pass a climate bill that would have boosted a  global market in carbon offsets.

But negotiators at the climate talks believe progress can  be made on a global plan called reduced emissions from  deforestation and degradation, or REDD, in which rich countries  would fund rewards for developing and poor nations like Brazil,  Indonesia and several in Africa such as Rwanda, that save and  restore forests.

Google hopes its tool will help speed cooperation in REDD  which could lead to further global agreements on climate.
“How does a rich donor nation gain a level of comfort that  what is being recorded about forest protection projects is in  fact what is taking place?” said Rebecca Moore, Earth Engine’s  engineering manager, on the sidelines of the U.N. global  warming talks.