INPE Launches Site for Sugarcane Harvest Monitoring

Hello reader!

It follows a note published on the day (03/30) in the website of the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) noting that INPE launches website for Sugarcane Harvest Monitoring in São Paulo state.

Duda Falcão

INPE Launches Site for Sugarcane
Harvest Monitoring in São Paulo State

Friday, March 30, 2012

Satellite images are analyzed and processed at the National Institute for Space Research (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais – INPE) for assessing whether farmers of São Paulo state are replacing manual sugar cane harvest – and the consequent use of fire – for mechanization, as the Brazilian Environmental Protocol has established.

To release data on the type of harvest – with or without sugar cane burning – it is going to be launched a site of the “Satellite Monitoring of Sugar Cane Crop” project (Projeto Monitoramento da Colheita da Cana-de-açúcar via Imagens de Satélite): www.dsr.inpe.br/laf/canacrua

The latest information on the 2011-2012 season show that mechanization has reached 65.2% of the crop in the state. This means that 4796140 hectares of harvested sugar cane in the last season, 3125619 hectares were harvested mechanically, while 1670521 hectares (34.8%) still has suffered from burns.

The drop in forest fires rates has significant impacts on the environment, reducing emissions, and in the population health, who suffers from the smoke in times of crop.

The State Department of Environment, the Sugar Cane Industry of São Paulo State Union (UNICA) and the supplier associations signed the Brazilian Environmental Protocol (Protocolo Agroambiental) to gradually reduce the practice of burning cane straw by growers in São Paulo. INPE’s data, generated under CANASAT Project, allows checking whether the information provided by farmers to the environmental bodies is true. Thus, satellite images of the harvest period are analyzed to identify if there are signs of burning.

At the new site, the data are presented in charts that allow evaluating the situation in each county or region since 2006. Publications, papers that describe methodology and results obtained by CANASAT Project will also be available at the site.

Article

In late 2011, the CANASAT team, linked to the Remote Sensing Division of the Department of Earth Observation at INPE, published the article "Remote Sensing Images in Support of Environmental Protocol: Monitoring Sugarcane Harvest in São Paulo State, Brazil". Check it out at http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/3/12/2682/

About CANASAT

Since 2003, CANASAT Project has been using remote sensing and geoprocessing to map cultivated area and provide information on the spatial distribution of the sugar cane crop. The mapping was provided initially only for the state of São Paulo, but since 2005 has been covering also Paraná, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul and, since 2010, Espírito Santo and Rio de Janeiro state.

But the mapping of the type of harvest, which verifies the pre-harvesting burning practice, is performed only for the state of São Paulo and was created due to the Environmental Protocol. Soon these maps will be available to other states of South-Central region.

The satellite images, due to its large territorial extensions and periodicity, are effective tools to safely monitor cultivated areas and pointing, for example, if the harvest was performed with or without burn of straw. Also allow keeping up with changes in land use and cover resulting from sugar cane expansion.


Source: Website of the National Institute for Space Research (INPE)

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