Capacity Strengthening Towards Application of Earth Observation Tools and Services to Enhancing Marine and Coastal Areas Management in West Africa

Author(s):  
Dogbeda Mawulolo Yao Azumah ◽  
Bennet Atsu Kwame Foli ◽  
Ignatius Kweku Williams ◽  
Kwame Adu Agyekum ◽  
Afia Adoma Boakye ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ioanna Varkitzi ◽  
Anestis Trypitsidis ◽  
Alkis Astyakopoulos ◽  
Constantinos Rizogiannis ◽  
Beatriz Gómez Miguel ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (14) ◽  
pp. 2296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Panagiotis Elias ◽  
George Benekos ◽  
Theodora Perrou ◽  
Issaak Parcharidis

The rise in sea level is expected to considerably aggravate the impact of coastal hazards in the coming years. Low-lying coastal urban centers, populated deltas, and coastal protected areas are key societal hotspots of coastal vulnerability in terms of relative sea level change. Land deformation on a local scale can significantly affect estimations, so it is necessary to understand the rhythm and spatial distribution of potential land subsidence/uplift in coastal areas. The present study deals with the determination of the relative vertical rates of the land deformation and the sea-surface height by using multi-source Earth observation—synthetic aperture radar (SAR), global navigation satellite system (GNSS), tide gauge, and altimetry data. To this end, the multi-temporal SAR interferometry (MT-InSAR) technique was used in order to exploit the most recent Copernicus Sentinel-1 data. The products were set to a reference frame by using GNSS measurements and were combined with a re-analysis model assimilating satellite altimetry data, obtained by the Copernicus Marine Service. Additional GNSS and tide gauge observations have been used for validation purposes. The proposed methodological approach has been implemented in three pilot cases: the city of Alexandroupolis in the Evros Delta region, the coastal zone of Thermaic Gulf, and the coastal area of Killini, Araxos (Patras Gulf) in the northwestern Peloponnese, which are Greek coastal areas with special characteristics. The present research provides localized relative sea-level estimations for the three case studies. Their variation is high, ranging from values close to zero, i.e., from 5–10 cm and 30 cm in 50 years for urban areas to values of 50–60 cm in 50 years for rural areas, close to the coast. The results of this research work can contribute to the effective management of coastal areas in the framework of adaptation and mitigation strategies attributed to climate change. Scaling up the proposed methodology to a continental level is required in order to overcome the existing lack of proper assessment of the relevant hazard in Europe.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra de Vries ◽  
Monica Estebanez Camarena

<p>West Africa’s economy is mainly sustained on agriculture and over 70% of crops are rain-fed. Economic growth and food security in this region is therefore highly dependent on the knowledge of rainfall patterns. According to the IPCC, the Global South will seriously suffer from climate change. As traditional rainfall patterns shift, accurate rainfall information becomes crucial for farmers to optimize food production.</p><p>The scarce rain gauge distribution and data transmission challenges make rainfall analysis difficult in these regions. Satellites could offer a solution to this problem, but present satellite products do not account for local characteristics and perform poorly in West Africa.</p><p>A rainfall retrieval algorithm, developed within the Schools and Satellites (SaS) project, could overcome the lack of ground data and good rainfall satellite products through earth observation and advanced machine learning. However, to validate such an algorithm requires a high amount of rainfall data from ground stations. Since rain gauges are scarce in West Africa, a (temporary) high density observation network is necessary to strengthen the training and validation dataset provided by TAHMO and GMet ground measurements. SaS therefore engages with schools in Northern Ghana to build a Citizen Observatory. </p><p>SaS is being funded by the European Space Agency as one of the pilot projects of CSEOL (Citizen Science and Earth Observation Lab). It is being developed in a cooperation between TU Delft, PULSAQUA, TAHMO Ghana, Smartphones4Water (S4W) and GMet. The Proof-of-Concept Algorithm will be fed with data collected in the Citizen Observatory during the rainy season of 2020.</p><p>This Citizen Observatory will be built around the already existing infrastructure of a classroom where Climate Change is amongst the topics in the Ghanaian teaching curriculum. We aim to provide a Climate Change educational module that can be used directly by the teachers. The educational module incorporates the building of their own low-cost rain gauge to be used for manual rainfall data collection. This rainfall collection method has already been highly tested by S4W in Nepal. Students will design their own research around the daily rainfall measurements, which they will submit via a web application called Open Data Kit (ODK). The data is being validated by including a picture of the rainfall measurement that is checked with the number passed on by the citizen scientist.</p><p>The Citizen Observatory will be placed under the existing TAHMO and S4W infrastructures to respectively continue the interaction with schools and to continue data collection, -validation and -visualization. If the algorithm proofs to indeed perform better than current satellite products for the pilot area in Northern Ghana, the Citizen Observatory could in the future help to validate and improve the product for the whole of West-Africa.</p><p>To enable the use of this Citizen Observatory for management of water resources and in this case more and better rainfall data, much effort is needed. We will demonstrate which measures we have taken to ensure that the Citizen Observatory performs with enough quality, and how (if done well) it has the potential to increase the impact of this study.</p>


Africa ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kwame Arhin

Opening ParagraphThe arrival of Europeans, and the introduction of guns, first in the coastal areas JL and then into the interior of West Africa, altered the nature of warfare. Already in the seventeenth century, the Akan-Fanti, Akim, Akwamu, and other peoples on the Gold Coast no longer relied entirely on bows and arrows, spears, and javelins which were the traditional weapons but used guns and even a few cannon. Besides the change in weapons, wars were undertaken on a larger scale than ever before—a situation which was aggravated by participation in the slave trade. Among the peoples of the Gold Coast, now Ghana, none excelled the Ashanti in either the scale or intensity of their fighting. From the turn of the seventeenth and the eighteenth centuries, they fought major wars of conquest and minor ones of consolidation throughout the area of present-day Ghana, and after 1820 they were involved in four major clashes with the British until the latter dissolved their kingdom in 1900.


2019 ◽  
Vol 53 (sup2) ◽  
pp. 67-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Lang ◽  
Petra Füreder ◽  
Barbara Riedler ◽  
Lorenz Wendt ◽  
Andreas Braun ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Diane Frost

‘Colonialism, Migration and a Diaspora in the Making’ explores the experience and labour of the Kru within the British shipping industry, and assesses the subsequent merging of their ethnic and occupational identity. The chapter also includes a comment on Liverpool’s involvement in the slave trade as well as highlighting the presence of British control of coastal areas of West Africa by the end of the nineteenth century.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Estebanez Camarena ◽  
Nick van de Giesen ◽  
Marie-Claire ten Veldhuis ◽  
Sandra de Vries

<p>West Africa’s economy is mainly sustained on agriculture and over 70% of crops are rain-fed. Economic growth and food security in this region is therefore highly dependent on the knowledge of rainfall patterns. According to the IPCC, the Global South will seriously suffer from climate change. As traditional rainfall patterns shift, accurate rainfall information becomes crucial for farmers to optimize food production.</p><p>The scarce rain gauge distribution and data transmission challenges make rainfall analysis difficult in these regions. Satellites could offer a solution to this problem, but present satellite products do not account for local characteristics and perform poorly in West Africa. For example, comparing the widely used TAMSAT and CHIRPS satellite rainfall products with ground data in our pilot area in the Northern Region of Ghana, we found a very poor correlation with TAMSAT and CHIRPS grossly overestimating the number of rainy days, while underestimating the amount of rainfall per event.</p><p>The RainRunner rainfall retrieval algorithm, developed within the Schools and Satellites (SaS) project, aims to overcome the lack of ground data and good rainfall satellite products through Earth Observation and advanced Machine Learning (ML). SaS is being funded by the European Space Agency as one of the pilot projects of CSEOL (Citizen Science and Earth Observation Lab). It is being developed in a cooperation between TU Delft, PULSAQUA, TAHMO Ghana, Smartphones4Water and the Ghana Meteorological Agency (GMet).</p><p>Research suggests that local characteristics are the reason for traditional rainfall retrieval algorithms to perform poorly in West Africa, where the land surface temperature and the concentration of atmospheric aerosols are higher than in other regions in the world. Hence, RainRunner will utilize information relevant to the rain process other than the traditionally used cloud top temperature, namely, cloud amount, atmospheric aerosols, soil moisture and land surface temperature. These data are derived from diverse sensors onboard ESA’s Sentinel satellites (S1, S2, S3 and S5P), as well as MSG’s Aviris. The satellite products, together with a Digital Elevation Model, will be pre-processed into datacubes to be fed to a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) to estimate precipitation for a certain geographic point.</p><p>CNNs have shown to achieve better results when modelling complex natural processes than other ML algorithms, when provided with big amounts of data and well-designed architectures that represent the physical process knowledge. Furthermore, they have the main advantages of computing efficiency and the ability to represent processes beyond numerical simulations. The latter is essential for understanding the complex interactions between variables, therefore resulting in not only improving rainfall estimates but also in increasing our understanding of processes in poorly measured regions.</p><p>The Proof-of-Concept algorithm will be trained and validated with TAHMO and GMet ground measurements. Eventually, the training and validation dataset will incorporate data acquired by a rainfall observation network combining low-cost sensors and Citizen Science data collected by schoolchildren in Ghana.</p><p>Once operative, the RainRunner will guide agricultural extension agents, support crop insurance and ultimately contribute to economic growth and food security in the Global South.</p>


1980 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Richards

The records of probably the biggest Birmingham gun-making firm specializing in the African trade and records of the Dutch West India Company are used in this article to throw more light on the quantities, types and quality of the guns imported into West Africa and on their effects in the eighteenth century. Inikori's estimate of 45 per cent as the proportion of English firearms in the total annual West African import of between 283,000 and 394,000 guns per annum is probably an underestimate because of the unknown quantities of English guns which were re-exported from Continental ports to West Africa. It is estimated tentatively that 180,000 guns per annum were being imported into the Gold and Slave Coasts by 1730, and that some of the most dramatic effects of the import of guns occurred between 1658 and 1730. A revolution in warfare began in the 1690s in the Senegambian coastal areas and along the Gold and Slave Coasts. The trebling of slave prices and the sharp reduction in gun prices between 1680 and 1720 enabled large militarized slave-exporting states to develop along the Gold and Slave Coasts. There was a strong demand for well-finished and well-proved guns as well as for the cheapest unproved guns, and the dangerous state of many of the guns imported into West Africa has been exaggerated. The reputations of European nations for the quality of their guns fluctuated. There was probably no steady deterioration in the quality of English guns imported between 1750 and 1807, but the quality of the cheapest guns deteriorated during periods of intense competition.


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