Planet Expands Contract with NASA to Provide Data to
All US Federal Civilian Agencies Researchers
September 14, 2021
Planet announced that the
Company has been awarded another contract by NASA
under their Commercial SmallSat Data Acquisition
(CSDA) Program. This contract grants all U.S.
Federal Civilian scientific researchers and National
Science Foundation funded researchers, including
contractors and grantees, access to Planet data
until September 2022. Planet recently entered into a
definitive merger agreement with dMY Technology
Group, Inc. IV (NYSE:DMYQ), a special purpose
acquisition company, to become a publicly-traded
company.
Planet was founded by three
former NASA scientists with the mission to use space
to help life on Earth by providing its unique,
global data set of daily scans of Earth’s entire
landmass to systematically and consistently monitor
change on the planet. Core to this mission is
Planet’s commitment to getting this proprietary data
into the hands of the scientific community to
further strengthen their research of the dynamic
Earth.
This is Planet's third year
supporting NASA’s CSDA program, which was created to
identify, evaluate, and acquire data from commercial
providers. Today, nearly 300,000 researchers have
access to Planet’s PlanetScope and RapidEye
satellite data. By integrating this information into
a variety of scientific studies focused on climate
change, biodiversity loss, and changing ecosystems,
researchers can better understand complex
sustainability challenges and gain insights on
potential solutions.
“NASA has led the way in
engaging with the commercial space industry and this
new contract further validates their commitment to
both commercial space and climate action. NASA
researchers have found great scientific utility in
high-resolution, daily data of the entire planet and
it has been exciting to see our contracts expand to
make this data accessible to the entire US Civil
Government and grantees for scientific purposes,”
said Robbie Schingler, Planet co-founder and Chief
Strategy Officer. “In the most critical decade for
climate action, NASA has made it possible to provide
researchers with robust datasets that can be used to
monitor and address the current climate crisis and
we look forward to collaborating further on this
important work.”
When combined with government
systems, commercial satellite data can help to
advance scientific understanding of our changing
world and enable better data-based decision-making
and management by federal programs, local
communities, companies, and individuals. Scientific
researchers are leveraging these advanced datasets
to investigate the impacts of climate change in the
Arctic and Antarctic, understand the causes of
natural disasters such as floods, and monitor crop
yields around the world.
"We're really excited to be
able to more easily share Planet data across all the
NASA Harvest partners,” said Dr. Hannah Kerner at
the University of Maryland and the machine learning
lead and U.S. domestic co-lead for NASA Harvest. “As
a consortium that spans multiple agencies and
universities, the ability to share data and
collaboratively advance research methods is critical
for achieving our goals.”
Dr. Joe Levy at Colgate
University shared: “Extended access to Planet data
for all federally-funded scientists is a
game-changer for researchers trying to figure out
what’s happening right now with our rapidly-changing
world. Working on NSF-supported research in
Antarctica using Planet data means being able to
watch for changes to Earth’s polar regions
practically every day the sun is up. We’re seeing
day-to-day changes in where ground ice is thawing,
when meltwater is flowing, and how once-frozen
environments are evolving. Seeing change unfold in
real time helps us pinpoint what’s driving the melt
so we can predict when, where, and how much more
could be coming. Especially in a time when travel to
remote field sites is limited by global pandemic
restrictions, Planet data helps my team feel like
we’re in the field."
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