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Climate blindness risked as satellites lose their eyes

By 2020, three-quarters of the US satellite instruments used to monitor Earth's weather and climate could be out of action. We need to launch more, and fast
Get a good look while you still can
Get a good look while you still can
(Image: NOAA)

OUR eyes around Earth are seeing less. US environmental satellites that helped forecasters predict superstorm Sandy are failing. By 2020, the fleet could have just a quarter of the sensors it has today.

In a posted online, of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, warns that new launches are not keeping up with the failures of older instruments. As a result, NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration could have just 20 sensors in orbit by 2020.

鈥淲e are basically going blind in terms of our ability to monitor the planet,鈥 says at the University of Maryland in College Park, who contributed to a recent .

There have been delays sending satellites into polar orbits. The first of NOAA鈥檚 new won鈥檛 launch until 2017, which last year forced NASA to launch a stop-gap satellite called . Any failures before 2017 will leave a gap in weather data.

Climate research is sensitive to launch delays, as new instruments need to operate simultaneously with old ones for a year to calibrate their sensors. Suomi鈥檚 sensors may fail before 2017, warns Trenberth.

Topics: Sensors / Space flight / Temperature / United States