COP28: UK climate
satellite contracts
4
December 2023
Airbus
UK has been awarded nearly £95 million and
Teledyne e2v £9 million, through the UK Space
Agency’s membership of the European Space Agency
(ESA), to deliver the next phase of the TRUTHS
mission.
The
funding to Airbus will go towards satellite
design and development, while Teledyne e2v will
work on a sensor, called the Hyperspectral
Imaging Spectrometer Detection System, and
associated electronics. This instrument will
make measurements of ocean and land surfaces to
support studies of Earth radiation budgets and
improve observations that support the modelling
of climate, land use change, the carbon cycle,
agriculture and pollution.
TRUTHS,
which stands for Traceable Radiometry
Underpinning Terrestrial- and Helio- Studies,
will collect the most accurate measurements of
energy coming into the Earth from the Sun, and
light reflected off Earth’s surface. This will
significantly improve understanding of changes
in the Earth’s climate and inform global action
to mitigate them.
Science,
Research and Innovation Minister, Andrew
Griffith, said: This UK-led mission will have a
global impact, providing invaluable measurements
to improve our understanding of our climate.
Thanks to British skills and expertise, this
work is generating growth and developing
important industrial capabilities across our
space sector, driving forward our ambitions to
cement the UK’s place as a science and
technology superpower.
Signing
at COP28 in Dubai (L-R: Antonino Spatola, Sales
& Marketing Director, Teledyne e2v, Beth
Greenaway, Chair of Space4Climate and Head of
Earth Observation and Climate, UK Space Agency,
David Masterson, Head of Future Programmes,
Airbus UK, Simonetta Cheli, Director of Earth
Observation at ESA, Dr Paul Bate, CEO of UK
Space Agency, Dr Karen St Germain, Division
Director of Earth Science, NASA, Donna Lyndsay,
Vice Chair Space4Climate and Strategic Market
Lead for Environment & Sustainability, Ordnance
Survey, Rune Floberghagen, Head of Climate
Action, Sustainability & Science Department at
ESA)
Due to
launch in 2030, the ground-breaking mission will
create a ‘climate and calibration observatory in
space’ which will reduce uncertainty in Earth
observation data and set a new benchmark to
detect changes in Earth’s climate system. This
will build confidence in climate action by
linking observations from space unequivocally to
international measurement standards.
Conceived by the UK’s National Physical
Laboratory and initiated by the UK Space Agency,
TRUTHS is being developed by ESA. The satellite
will be built by the UK space industry, led by
Airbus UK, along with partners across Europe,
including Greece, Spain, Switzerland, Romania
and Czech Republic, which have also provided
funding for the mission.
Dr Paul
Bate, Chief Executive of the UK Space Agency,
who has been at COP28 this weekend, said: This a
major milestone for the TRUTHS mission and
fantastic news for our world-leading Earth
observation sector.
The
mission will play a vital role in improving how
we monitor climate change using satellite data
and supporting the decisive climate action which
global nations are negotiating at COP28.
But
TRUTHS is more than something to monitor the
planet, it is an exemplar of how the industry
can incorporate sustainable space operations and
reduce carbon impacts through the life cycle of
the mission.
TRUTHS
will complement the Copernicus Sentinel missions
and other systems, which help measure 38 of the
55 Essential Climate Variables from space. By
also observing the Moon and specific sites on
Earth, TRUTHS will provide calibration
references – helping to improve the accuracy of
other satellites in orbit and harmonise results
from the global Earth observation network,
increasing its ability to inform decisive
climate action.
Jean
Marc Nasr, Head of Space Systems at Airbus,
said: This contract takes us
one step closer to building a mission that will
enable scientists and climatologists to cross
reference their measurements and data enabling
much more accurate forecasts and analysis in a
shorter time. TRUTHS will provide the gold
standard of calibration for space-based Earth
observation – a kind of ‘standards laboratory in
space’.
Antonino
Spatola, Business Development, Sales and
Marketing Director at Teledyne e2v Space
Imaging, said: We are
proud to work with the European Space Agency,
the UK Space Agency, and Airbus on the important
climate change TRUTHS mission. Our sensor and
electronics onboard TRUTHS will be the enabling
technology of this space-based metrology
laboratory for climate change forecasting and
play a key role in giving climate
decision-makers confidence in climate data
gathered from space. This is also a testament to
the capabilities and skills in the UK Space
sector and it is important that together our
work at Teledyne e2v makes the world a better
place for future generations.
The
announcement of the new contracts was made
during the UK Space Agency’s involvement in
COP28 in Dubai. The Agency, exhibiting alongside
Space4Climate, is hosting two events during the
climate conference; one on TRUTHS and how it can
support climate action and the other on the
importance of international standards for
monitoring methane – a powerful greenhouse gas –
from space. A Space Summit during COP28 is
expected to lead to a number of leading
spacefaring nations adopting a space climate
pledge.
The
TRUTHS event at COP28 includes input from the
other five ESA member states which collaborate
with the UK on the mission. It will also
highlight how TRUTHS is part of a future global
system of collaboration that will complement
NASA’s CLARREO pathfinder mission, which is
designed to detect infrared emissions from
Earth.
Today’s
announcement follows the recent news in the
Autumn Statement of an additional £47 million to
boost activity and innovation in the Earth
observation sector, and comes ahead of the UK
re-joining the EU Copernicus programme in
January 2024.
The UK
also committed £314 million in funding for Earth
observation in November 2022, as part of its
record investment in ESA programmes.