
UK-DMC2 image of fires burning in California © DMCii, 2013. Smoke is clearly visble rising from the dark burnscar caused by the fires.
Image courtesy of SSTL.
A recent report by U.S. Forest Service scientists claims that climate change will cause wildfires to increase by 50 to 100 percent in the U.S. by 2050, which means that there is increasing interest in finding ways to ensure early detection and safe, timely, and appropriate deployment of fire-fighting resources on the ground.
The DMC constellation, built by Surrey and operated by Surrey’s remote sensing subsidiary DMCii, is a constellation of independently owned but collectively operated satellites. While one satellite alone is not able to achieve rapid revisits, constellations of small Earth observation (EO) satellites like the DMC constellation can provide the coverage required to effectively monitor disasters.

In Russia, 120,000 acres burned. Image courtesy of ScanEx.
Ideally, fire monitoring satellites would be deployed into orbits which allow local ground observation in the afternoon, when most fires tend to start, rather than late-morning or noon for traditional EO missions requiring maximum daylight illumination for scene capture.
Applying the DMC constellation business model of pooling resources and sharing data within the community, taking advantage of continued developments of smaller low-cost infrared sensors capable of capturing higher-resolution data, and leveraging the improved data processing, analysis, navigation, control, and communications capabilities of small satellites would make it possible for a constellation of as few as four small satellites to provide the cost-effective, yet high-value, rapid, regular, and detailed information necessary to enable fire management teams to make the right decisions.
Surrey US is currently investigating how capable small infrared satellites could be applied to help with a serious fire situation in the U.S. and is pursuing opportunities to define operational systems that could be quickly deployed. (Source: Surrey Blog.)

