Title: NASA Contributions to Global Drought Monitoring David Toll
1NASA Contributions to Global Drought Monitoring
David Toll NASA Water Resources Hydrological
Sciences NASA/GSFC Brad Doorn NASA Water
Resources Program Manager NASA Applied Sciences
Program Jared Entin NASA Terrestrial Hydrology
Program Manager Edwin Engman NASA Water Resources
Consultant/SAIC Richard Lawford NASA Water
Resources Consultant/UMBC 11 April 2011 NASA
Drought Workshop Dave.toll_at_nasa.gov
2NASA Water Resources Program Drought
- Drought FAO estimates that by 2025 two-thirds
of the world population will be living under
water stress conditions from climate change,
population increases and increases in water use. - NASA remote sensing modeling Combined with
and other Earth science data for global drought
monitoring using satellite and modeling,
including water for food, improved water
management, and water availability for
ecosystems. - Integrated system addressing meteorological
(e.g., precipitation), hydrological (e.g.,
streamflow, snowpack, ground water), agricultural
(e.g., soil moisture), ecological (e.g.,
vegetation stress) drought. - NASA Water Resources has had a strong focus on
drought applications the last five years - - Nghiem (JPL) Verdin (USGS) Remote Sensing
for USDM vegetation indices soil moisture
change) - - Rodell (NASA/GSFC) Terrestrial Water Storage
Ground Water (Using GRACE )to USDM NADM - - Cai (U. Illinois) Developing Seasonal
Predictive Capability for Drought Decision
Support - - Koster (NASA/GSFC) Development of Robust
Drought Index for Agricultural Applications - - Verdin (USGS) A Land Data Assimilation System
for Famine Early Warning - - Linked support for NOAA/NASA North American
LDAS Drought Monitoring -
3NASA USDM DROUGHT Accomplishments
- NASA Funding Several Projects to Support US
Drought Monitor - Expedited MODIS Vegetation Drought Response Index
(VegDRI) Soil Moisture Change USGS/EROS and
NDMC have integrated MODIS into the national
VegDRI model on a rapid, weekly schedule. JPL
automated a procedure to provide Soil Moisture
Change updated projects. - Prototype Terrestrial Water Storage (TWS) Using
GRACE Satellite Data GSFC and NDMC working to
provide GRACE TWS data assimilated in to land
surface models for a new key drought indicator
including deep soil moisture and ground water. - Resolution Benchmark NASA results have excellent
resolutions to resolve the county-level goal of
NIDIS. This is evident in the comparison of SMC,
TWS and VegDRI products versus USDM drought maps
at the higher resolution. - Improvements of USDM are important for users
NOAA NWS uses D2 to trigger drought information
statements, IRS for tax deferrals, USDA
programmatic usage, and Livestock Forage Disaster
Program disbursement (147,109,381 in 2008, and
77,608,125 in 2009).
4MODIS System Characteristics for Inputs to US
Drought Monitor PI J. Verdin (USGS)
Product Characteristics
Historic
Expedited
Aqua and Terra MODIS
Instruments
Continental U.S. (CONUS)
Extent
250, 500, and 1000 meters
Spatial Resolutions
lt 30 days after last input
1 day after last input
Product Latency
Indefinitely
90 days
Archive Persistence
7-day, Interval
7-day, Rolling
Composite Period
Example eMODIS product Terra MODIS 1000m NDVI
CONUS composite for August 2-8, 2006
NDVI, Surface Refl. Bands, Quality, Acq. Date
Layers
Lambert Equal Area Azimuthal / GeoTIFF
Projection/Format
Processing Flow
Expedited L1B (NOAA NRT)
Long Term Archive and Web-enabled Access
Cloud Mask Processing (MODIS PGE 03)
Surface Refl. Processing (MODIS PGE 11)
Historic L1B (NASA LAADS)
Composite Processing (NDVI, CONUS)
Ancillary Data
5The Famine Early Warning Systems Network
(FEWS-NET)
- Using NASA Land Information System (LIS) to Help
Extend Coverage beyond Sub-Sahara - Satellite Precipitation
- Satellite Vegetation Greenness
- Biomass Yield Forecasting
- Satellite Snow Cover and Snow Water Equivalent
6Integrating Enhanced GRACE Water Storage
(Including Ground Water ) towards Global
Assessments
Model assimilated water storage, mm January
December 2005 Loop
GRACE water storage, mm January December 2005
Loop
Rodell
7Multi Model Drought Model Comparison for Use in
Global Monitoring Systems
? Soil moisture percentiles from each Land
Surface Model combined to form ensemble mean. ?
Project will eventually use multiple land surface
models (Mosaic, Noah, VIC, Sacramento, CLM3,
HySSiB, and Catchment). ? Ensemble model
outputs often offer more accurate depictions of
drought ? Even poor depictions are
informative--Large model spread indicates lack of
confidence ? Indices of Met drought (NCDC PDSI),
Met drought-II (NCDC PHDI), Ag drought (Palmer Z)
8Seasonal Root Zone Predictions (Applicable
Globally) Useful for Rain-fed Agriculture
Production
Initial conditions (Dec. 1, 2008)
1-month lead (Jan. 1, 2009)
Root zone soil moisture anomaly (expressed as
standard normal deviate)
3-month lead (Mar. 1, 2009)
2-month lead (Feb. 1, 2009)
Drought conditions given a probability to persist
into early March.
Project Development of a Robust Drought Index
for Agricultural Applications. PI R. Koster,
NASA/GSFC
http//gmao.gsfc.nasa.gov/forecasts/
http//www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/fews/
9Middle East North Africa (MENA) NASA Water
Information System Platforms (WISPs) for Water
Management Joint Activity between NASA, the World
Blank and USAID (with support from USDA and
Universities)
- NASA, USAID, and the International Center for
Biosaline Agriculture (ICBA) have partnered to
provide a regional (1/8o) Land Data Assimilation
System of the MENA using remote sensing to
address water management issues. - The World Bank through the Global Environment
Fund (GEF) and USAID is funding NASA to install
Water Information System Platforms throughout the
MENA (centers Jordan, Tunisia, Morocco, Lebanon
Egypt) for country and regional (basin) use. - NASA Water Information System Platform Tools
- - Regional (1/8o) to Local (1km and finer) water
availability maps. - - Monitoring prediction of drought processes.
- - Flood warning inundation mapping .
- - Climate and land use change impacts on water
resources. - - Estimates of crop yield, irrigation mapping
and land cover change. - Satellite data to estimate evapotranspiration
and the consumptive water loss. - Estimation of changes to ground water and
terrestrial water storage changes using GRACE
satellite data.
Figure 1. Precipitation (mm/month) for July 2007
at 0.04 resolution, from the UC Irvine
PERSIANN-GCCS system. Hourly, near-real time
data from PERSIANN will be a primary input to the
MENA LDAS.
Figure 2. Seasonal variations in
evapotranspiration (mm/month) over the MENA
region, output from MENA LDAS. Top December 2002
- February 2003 average. Bottom June 2003 -
August 2003 average. (Contact D. Toll and J.
Bolten NASA)
10NASA Water Resources Drought Related Activities
World Bank, USAID NASA Water Information
System Platforms (WISPs) Installing in the MENA
with Drought Monitoring as a Major Component for
Jordan, Morocco, Lebanon Egypt. - MENA
Regional Center on Water (Obamas June 2009
Pledge on Scientific Centers) - Highlighted in
World Bank and US Government MOU, Cooperation
Relating to Water Coordinate and Leverage
Group on Earth Observations (GEO) Drought
Activities, including Continental Drought,
Drought Clearinghouse NIDIS subtask.
FEWS-NET SERVIR Plans for drought monitoring
in East Africa SERVIR node. UNESCO NASA
Working with UNESCO IHP (Princeton U. and
FEWS-NET) for African Drought Monitor
LIS-AFWA Air Force Weather Agency replacing
their AGHRMET hydrology-meteorology with NASA
Land Information System Science Technology
to Aid the World USAID and NASA MoU for April
25, 2011. ICIWaRM (International Center for
Integrated Water Resources Management) UNESCO
Category II Water Center Activities include
G-WADI for semi-arid to arid ecosystems of the
world. USAID Global Water for Food at
University of Nebraska Lincoln. Global Water
Solutions Center (GWSC) - NGO with State
Department to address world's critical freshwater
issues.