Welcome to the website of the Horizon 2020 funded project EGSIEM (European Gravity Service for Improved Emergency Management).
This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 637010, and is supported by the Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI) under contract number 15.0032. The views expressed on this website are those of the EGSIEM consortium alone (unless stated otherwise) and the European Union is not responsible for any use that might be made of the information contained herein.
Here you will be able to discover more about our project and the people behind it by clicking on the links above.
The Project Summary
Earth observation (EO) satellites yield a wealth of data for scientific, operational and commercial exploitation. However, the redistribution of environmental mass is not yet part of the EO data products to date. These observations, derived from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission, and in future by GRACE-FO (Follow-on), deliver fundamental insights into the global water cycle. Changes in continental water storage control the regional water budget and can, in extreme cases, result in floods and droughts that often claim a high toll on infrastructure, the economy and human lives. The aim of this project is to demonstrate that mass redistribution products open the door for innovative approaches to flood & drought monitoring and forecasting. The timeliness and reliability of information is the primary concern for any early-warning system. We aim to increase the temporal resolution from one month, typical for GRACE products, to one day, and to provide gravity field information within 5 days (near real-time). Early warning indications derived from these products are expected to improve the timely awareness of potentially evolving hydrological extremes and to help in the scheduling of high-resolution follow-up observations. The European Gravity Service for improved Emergency Management (EGSIEM) will provide adequate data products and indicators for tentative integration into the work of the Center for Satellite Based Crisis Information (ZKI, operated by the German Aerospace Center) and its future use within international initiatives such as the Copernicus Emergency Management Service and the International Charter “Space and Major Disasters”. The performance of our products will be assessed with complementary data and post-processed mass products, derived from the combined knowledge of the entire European GRACE community unified in our consortium.
Our efforts will thus culminate in three dedicated services:
- a scientific combination service
- a near real-time service
- a hydrological/early warning service