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Extension of the allocation to EESS in the 9.5GHz range

Enabling higher resolution services for the EESS by extended allocations in the 9.6GHz frequency range Presentation to New Zealand National Mtg Wellington, 3 August 2011. Extension of the allocation to EESS in the 9.5GHz range. Very high resolution radar information is a key pre-requisite for

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Extension of the allocation to EESS in the 9.5GHz range

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  1. Enabling higher resolution services for the EESS by extended allocations in the 9.6GHz frequency rangePresentation to New Zealand National MtgWellington, 3 August 2011

  2. Extension of the allocation to EESS in the 9.5GHz range Very high resolution radar information is a key pre-requisite for enhanced environmental monitoring For considerations under AI8.2 (WRC-12): Administrations are invited to consider an extensions of the EESS allocation by 600MHz at WRC-15 Agenda Item 1.x (WRC-15) “To consider an extension of the current worldwide allocation to the Earth Exploration Satellite Service (EESS) (active) and the Space Research Service SRS (active) in the frequency band 9 300 – 9 900 MHz by at least 600 MHz within the frequency range 8 700 – 10 500 MHz in accordance with Resolution [EESS+600MHz](WRC-12)”.

  3. Typical applications provided by EESS systems Applications and services provided by several systems worldwide comprise • Emergency response • Topographic Mapping • Forest Monitoring • Surface Movement • Change Detection • Maritime Applications • Geodesy and Cadastre And many others

  4. Why future EESS systems should operate with higher bandwidth Very high resolution mapping and monitoring is required stipulating substantial socio-economic benefit • Disaster relief and humanitarian aid actions require ad hoc and up-to-date geoinformation also from the remote parts of the globe • Airborne imaging is very often limited by remoteness of the area to be observed and cloudy weather conditions • Current radar satellites are yet too low in resolution to allow adequate infrastructure damage assessment (and consequently a rough estimate of the number of affected people) to assist first responder activities • Identification of trafficable roads, landing strips or suitable spaces to set-up first aid or refugee camps is limited by the resolution of today’s radar sensors • Support of fight against Climate Change • Monitoring of deforestation and forest degradation – enabling the REDD+ process • Enabling Governments in developing countries can verify that their measures against deforestation and forest degradation have been successful even at a single tree level

  5. Why future EESS systems should operate with higher bandwidth • Safety of energy supply • Ensuring sustainable oil and gas production by careful monitoring of sites and managing the extraction. • Monitoring the integrity of comprehensive pipeline networks - detect leakages to avoid severe environmental pollution. • Enable reliable and weather independent monitoring • Cadastre • To foster the economic development of developing countries by property ownership registration • High-precision cadastre is a major pre-requisite to maintain and develop properties by protecting agricultural and infrastructure investments • Especially countries in the tropical belt suffer from substantial cloud coverage while facing nations rapid built-up areas, growth and land cover and change of use of land • EESS can support affordable, reliable and weather independent mapping capacity A successful and sustainable integration of derived information only can be achieved in a very high resolution mode in the sub meter area to fulfill essential user requirements

  6. Key criteria for a potential extension of the EESS (active) Current allocation in the ITU RR 9.3 – 9.9GHz => 600MHz • Doubling picture resolution compared to current 600MHz needs 1.2 GHz • Any extension should include the current allocation to ensure long-term continuity of observation data already collected for several years • The new allocation should be in the 9/10 GHz range: optimum compromise between high resolution (RF bandwidth) and all-weather propagation performance • Any extension of the allocation should be contiguous • Agenda Item should investigate sharing conditions for either 600MHz above, below, or any other appropriate apportionment between 8.7 … 10.5 GHz in any case the actual radar exposure time is in the order of seconds

  7. Current Radio Regulations in the frequency range 8.65 – 10.5 GHz Optional extensions and radio services affected (ITU RR Ed. 2008)

  8. Typical operating modes of EESS systems • EESS satellites typically • perform about 15 Earth orbits per day • travel at about 500km altitude • are inclined by 97° (angle of orbital plane vs. the equatorial plane) • => Track of sub-satellite points repeats every 11 days • => Exposure times of a few seconds per snap shot

  9. Typical RF characteristics of 1200MHz EESS Radars The compatibilities of similar EESS Radar systems with other radio services allocated in the band 9.3 – 9.9 GHz have been studied in Report ITU-R RS.2094

  10. Thank You for Your kind attention

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