Environmental challenges, climate change, water and food security and urban air pollution, they are all interlinked, yet each is studied as such, separately. This is not a sustainable situation, for anybody anymore. To tackle this, professor Markku Kulmala calls for a continuous, comprehensive monitoring of interactions between the planet’s surface and atmosphere in his article “Build a global Earth observatory” published in Nature, January 4, 2018.
In his article, he refers to his long experience of collecting environmental data. He has built a station, and not just one, but probably the most impressive station, called SMEAR II (Station for Measuring Ecosystem-Atmosphere Relationships), in the boreal forests of Finland showing how a rounded set of environmental measurements can be obtained.
Global Earth observatory
Now building on a large scale, the answer is a global Earth observatory, consisting of 1,000 or more well-equipped ground stations around the world that track environments and key ecosystems fully and continuously. Data from these stations would be linked to data from satellite-based remote sensing, laboratory experiments and computer models accordingly.
“Incomplete coverage from ground stations is the main limit to observations of Earth’s conditions. Satellites can continuously, online 24/7, monitor some compounds, such as CO2, ozone and aerosols, almost planet-wide. But they cannot resolve processes or fluxes, or trace the hundreds more compounds of interest. Satellite data must be ‘ground-truthed’, professor Kulmala says.
This global observatory of 1,000 super stations needs to be established soon, within 10-15 years.
“The costs would be around €10 million (US$11.8 million) to €20 million per station, which can be compared to the building costs of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, or that of US President Donald Trump’s proposed Mexican wall.”
Possibility to find new feedback loops in a coherent data set
Nevertheless, a shift in how environmental data are collected and disseminated is needed, there is no question about that.
“There is a scientific interest, as well, in this data,” professor Markku Kulmala says, “the researchers could find new mechanisms and feedback loops in this coherent data set.”
Markku Kulmala is professor of physics and director of the Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research at the University of Helsinki, Finland; and head of the Aerosol and Haze Laboratory at the Beijing University of Chemical Technology, China.
Markku Kulmala, Build a global Earth Observatory, Nature, Vol. 553, 4 January 2018
Contact details:
Professor Markku Kulmala, + 358 40 596 2311, markku.kulmala@helsinki.fi, @markkukulmala1
Press Officer Minna Meriläinen-Tenhu, +358 50 415 0316, @MinnaMeriTenhu, minna.merilainen@helsinki.fi