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GIS In The Pacific

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EVERY effort will be made to ensure that Geographic Information System (GIS) and Remote Sensing are adequately resourced to serve the needs of the Pacific region, says SOPAC director Doctor Russell Howorth. He made the comment while opening the 2011 Pacific Islands Geographic Information System and Remote Sensing Conference on Monday.

"The goal of SOPAC is to apply geoscience and technology to realise new opportunities for improving the livelihoods of Pacific communities. GIS and remote sensing is clearly a technology which can contribute to realising improving livelihoods," said Howorth.

GIS is a computer-based tool used to collect, combine and overlay information in the form of easily understood maps constructed from up-to-date satellite images and field data, while remote sensing is the collection of information about the earth from a distance.

The five-day conference is being held at SPC in Suva, Fiji, and will provide a platform for government representatives from Pacific Island countries and territories, donor partner representatives and other stakeholders in the NGO and private sector to meet with scientists and GIS/remote sensing experts from around the world, and discuss new tools and options for collecting and applying data.

Dr Howorth said the conference, the largest of its kind in the region, would hold a special discussion session on methods of GIS and Remote Sensing that had to be adapted to Pacific standards, and would include elements such as open source software and web applications, utility applications, vegetation mapping and applications to climate change adaptation.

He explained how GIS and remote sensing contributed to building the resilience of small island developing states in the Pacific and assisted in managing their risks.

For example, it is now possible to count the number of coconut palms per hectare using very high-resolution image data, in the interest of assessing coconut palms as a resource, whether for food security, biofuel, or copra, as has been done in Kiribati and Tuvalu.

A very recent image of shipping vessels in Suva Harbour also demonstrates the potential of radar data, with a resolution of one metre, for the particularly important issue of monitoring tuna fishing vessels in the region.

Increasingly, very high-resolution image data of high accuracy is also used in the delineation of maritime boundaries, for example, in Kiribati and Cook Islands. And in Fiji, the Agriculture Department is also monitoring deforestation by mapping non-forest area with image data at SOPAC.

Dr Howorth assured the participants that SOPAC would work from within SPC to build an even better regional platform that supports, at national level, the opportunities offered by GIS and remote sensing tools.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 30 November 2011 09:03  

Newsflash

4 September 2014, Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC), Apia, Samoa - Small island developing states of the Pacific face a set of difficult and complex challenges in securing safe drinking water and sanitation facilities for their citizens – challenges not easily addressed by single communities, organisations or sectors working in isolation. To make progress in the area of safe water and sanitation, the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC) is convinced that a multi-sector, partnership approach is the key, and SPC is promoting the use of partnerships to tackle the region’s most difficult water and sanitation challenges head on.

Dr Colin Tukuitonga, SPC’s Director-General, feels that effective partnerships are the way forward in harnessing the energy and expertise needed to overcome the challenges of securing safe and sustainable drinking water and sanitation facilities. ‘At SPC we already work closely with our member countries and territories to help bring the various sectors together and demonstrate the benefits of sustainable water and sanitation solutions,’ Dr Tukuitonga said. ‘What we’re now seeing in the region is increasing collaboration between sectors, stakeholder groups, and also between Pacific Island countries and territories.’

Dr Tukuitonga was speaking in Apia at the United Nations Conference on Small Island Developing States, or SIDS, which is bringing together partners from across the globe to focus the world’s attention on a group of countries that remain a special case for sustainable development in view of their unique and particular vulnerabilities.