EU Commission uniting on
Earth observation for the Philippines
ESA and the European Commission
have signed a contribution agreement to build a
Copernicus mirror site in the Philippines – the first of
its kind in southeast Asia. The new CopPhil initiative
will enhance the response capability and resilience of
the Philippines to natural and human made disasters
through the strategic use of space data. This will help
reduce vulnerability of the nation to climate hazards,
support climate adaption, food security and
environmental protection.
With €7.3 million provided in
funding for the CopPhil initiative in the Philippines,
ESA and the EU, along with national stakeholders, will
support the uptake of the Copernicus Programme – the
most ambitious Earth observation programme to date.
The CopPhil initiative is part of
the new Global Gateway strategy of the EU encouraging
the advanced utilisation of Copernicus data and
information services, which in turn, will support better
policy definition, improved planning, increased
transparency, commitment and accountability.
ESA’s Director General Josef
Aschbacher commented, “The agreement today is further
testimony that we are committed to putting European
space assets at the service of managing global issues,
from climate to development policy. There is high
potential for further expanding this collaboration in
the future, in line with the EU Green Deal and Digital
Agenda goals, which also aligns with the ESA Agenda
2025.”
Benjamin Koetz, Head of ESA’s
Sustainable Initiatives Office, added, “ESA's Earth
observation track record in varied regions including
Asia, Africa or Latin America and our expertise in
making the most out of satellite data across different
sectors here on Earth means we are ideally placed to
implement this action plan together with the European
Commission and the Philippines.”
The programme will be a building
block for the future Team Europe Initiative on Digital
Transformation and Digitalisation, with a Team Europe
Approach. The primary national partners for the National
Copernicus Capacity Support Action Programme for the
Philippines (CopPhil) are the Department of Science and
Technology of the Government of the Philippines,
together with the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA).
The agreement was signed today at
the European Space Conference by Josef Aschbacher, ESA’s
Director General, Koen Doens, Director General for
International Partnerships at the European Commission,
in the presence of Pablito Mendoza, Deputy Chief of
Mission and Consul General of the Embassy of the
Republic of the Philippines to the Kingdom of Belgium
and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.
This new collaboration takes place
in the context of the EU Global Gateway Strategy, which
aims to boost smart, clean and secure links in digital,
energy and transport sectors and to strengthen health,
education and research systems across the world.
13 & 14 June 2023
Fullerton Hotel
Sydney
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