Aim
This course introduces satellite technology and Earth observation workflows used for climate monitoring and disaster response. Participants will learn how satellites collect environmental data (optical, thermal, microwave, and radar), how to interpret key climate and hazard indicators, and how satellite products support early warning, rapid damage assessment, and recovery planning. The program balances satellite fundamentals with practical, decision-focused use cases, ending with a capstone plan for a climate or disaster response scenario.
Program Objectives
- Understand Satellite Fundamentals: Orbits, sensors, resolution, and why they matter for monitoring.
- Learn Core Remote Sensing Products: NDVI, land surface temperature, precipitation, soil moisture, water extent, and more.
- Disaster Response Workflows: Rapid mapping for floods, fires, cyclones, landslides, and earthquakes.
- Radar (SAR) Awareness: Understand cloud-penetrating imaging for disasters and deformation mapping.
- Data-to-Decision Thinking: Convert satellite layers into actionable insights for authorities and communities.
- Quality & Limitations: Know uncertainty sources, cloud effects, temporal gaps, and false interpretations.
- Hands-on Outcome: Create a satellite-based monitoring + response blueprint for a real scenario.
Program Structure
Module 1: Why Satellites Matter for Climate and Disasters
- Earth observation as a “global sensor network”: coverage, consistency, and repeatability.
- Climate monitoring vs disaster response: long-term trends vs rapid situational awareness.
- Key use cases: drought, heatwaves, floods, wildfires, cyclones, coastal change.
- What satellites can’t do alone: ground truthing and local context needs.
Module 2: Satellite Basics (Orbits, Swaths, and Revisit)
- Orbit types: LEO vs GEO and what each is good for (overview).
- Revisit time and temporal resolution: why “how often” matters.
- Spatial resolution vs coverage trade-off: city-scale vs regional/global monitoring.
- Sensor footprints, swaths, and mosaicking concepts.
Module 3: Sensors and What They Measure
- Optical imaging: land cover, vegetation, water, and visible impacts.
- Thermal sensing: land surface temperature and heat stress indicators.
- Microwave sensing: precipitation and soil moisture concepts (overview).
- Radar (SAR): imaging through clouds/smoke and day-night capability.
Module 4: Resolution, Calibration, and Data Quality
- Spatial, temporal, spectral, and radiometric resolution—simple interpretation.
- Atmospheric effects and clouds: why preprocessing matters.
- Georeferencing basics: aligning layers correctly for mapping.
- Uncertainty and error sources: how to communicate confidence responsibly.
Module 5: Satellite Products for Climate Monitoring
- Vegetation and drought indicators: NDVI/EVI concepts and anomaly mapping.
- Land surface temperature and urban heat island monitoring.
- Snow/ice and water resources: seasonal monitoring concepts.
- Sea level/coastal change overview: shoreline change and storm surge context.
Module 6: Flood Monitoring and Rapid Mapping
- Flood extent mapping: optical vs SAR approaches and when to use each.
- Pre-event and post-event comparison: change detection concept.
- Exposure overlays: population, roads, hospitals, critical infrastructure.
- Producing decision-ready outputs: maps, stats, and priority zones.
Module 7: Wildfire and Smoke Monitoring
- Fire detection basics: hotspots and burn scar mapping concepts.
- Smoke and air quality context: plume tracking and exposure awareness (overview).
- Post-fire impacts: soil erosion risk and vegetation recovery monitoring.
- Operational considerations: timeliness, cloud/smoke challenges, and alerts.
Module 8: Cyclones, Storms, and Coastal Hazards
- Storm monitoring overview: cloud structure, rainfall, and wind-related indicators (concept).
- Coastal inundation and storm surge mapping basics (overview).
- Damage assessment: roof damage, vegetation loss, and infrastructure disruption cues.
- Supporting response: evacuation routes, shelter mapping, and access constraints.
Module 9: Earthquakes, Landslides, and Deformation with SAR (Overview)
- InSAR concept: measuring ground deformation from radar phase (high-level).
- Earthquake impacts: surface displacement mapping and risk insights.
- Landslide susceptibility cues: slope, rainfall, vegetation loss, and soil moisture (framework view).
- Limitations and validation: terrain, decorrelation, and ground confirmation needs.
Module 10: From Satellite Data to Action (Workflow + Reporting)
- Workflow: data discovery → preprocessing → indices → classification/change detection → maps.
- Rapid products vs detailed products: speed/accuracy trade-offs.
- Dashboards and communication: clear legends, uncertainty notes, and stakeholder-ready summaries.
- Ethics and privacy: sensitive locations, humanitarian mapping, and responsible sharing.
Final Project
- Create a Satellite-Based Climate/Disaster Response Blueprint for one scenario.
- Include: objective, study area, data sources (sensor types), processing steps, key indicators, map outputs, and decision workflow.
- Example projects: flood rapid mapping plan for a district, wildfire burn severity + recovery monitoring, drought early warning dashboard concept, cyclone damage assessment workflow, urban heat island monitoring plan.
Participant Eligibility
- Students and professionals in Environmental Science, Geography, GIS/Remote Sensing, Disaster Management, or related fields
- Government/NGO professionals involved in climate resilience and disaster response
- Engineers and data analysts supporting geospatial decision systems
- Basic GIS familiarity is helpful, but the course is structured for beginners too
Program Outcomes
- Remote Sensing Literacy: Understand sensors, resolutions, and how satellite data is used in practice.
- Climate Monitoring Skill: Ability to interpret vegetation, temperature, and water-related indicators.
- Disaster Mapping Readiness: Ability to design rapid mapping workflows for major hazards.
- Decision Communication: Ability to produce stakeholder-ready outputs with uncertainty awareness.
- Portfolio Deliverable: A complete satellite monitoring/response blueprint you can showcase.
Program Deliverables
- Access to e-LMS: Full access to course materials, hazard case sheets, and templates.
- Workflow Toolkit: sensor selection guide, index cheat-sheet, rapid mapping checklist, reporting template.
- Case Exercises: flood/wildfire/cyclone mapping scenarios and interpretation tasks.
- Project Guidance: Mentor support for final blueprint completion.
- Final Assessment: Certification after assignments + capstone submission.
- e-Certification and e-Marksheet: Digital credentials provided upon successful completion.
Future Career Prospects
- Remote Sensing / GIS Analyst (Climate & Disaster)
- Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) Data Associate
- Climate Monitoring & Early Warning Analyst
- Geospatial Data Specialist (Public Sector/NGO)
- Environmental Intelligence Associate
Job Opportunities
- Government & Agencies: Disaster management authorities, climate monitoring units, urban resilience teams.
- NGOs & Humanitarian Orgs: Rapid mapping, exposure analysis, and recovery monitoring projects.
- Research Institutes: Climate, hazards, and Earth observation labs.
- Geospatial & Tech Firms: Earth observation analytics, mapping platforms, and decision-support systems.
- Consulting: Climate risk, resilience planning, and environmental impact analytics roles.









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