sospeter muhongo university of dar es salaam [email protected] profmuhongo.sospeter@gmail
DESCRIPTION
Global Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) Trends: Opportunities and Challenges for Africa’s Development – The Role of Parliament. Launching the African Inter-Parliamentary Forum on Science, Technology and Innovation (AIPF-STI). Sospeter Muhongo University of Dar Es Salaam - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
TGS
Global Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) Trends: Opportunities and Challenges
for Africa’s Development – The Role of Parliament
Sospeter MuhongoUniversity of Dar Es Salaam
[email protected]@gmail.c
omADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA Monday, 02 May 2011
Launching the African Inter-Parliamentary Forum on Science, Technology and Innovation (AIPF-STI)
TGS
THE AFRICAN PARLIAMENT: In case of STI
• Promote and Facilitate the Sustainability of Sound Livelihood of the African population through the deployment of STI
MAIN ACTION LINES:• Promote and Facilitate the Generation of
Knowledge for Competitive, Robust and Predictable Economic Growth
• Support sustainability of sound STI Educational, Training and R&D Infrastructure, including National Innovation Systems
●Promote and Facilitate Commercialization of Africa’s R&D products
• Promote and Facilitate the Generation, Growth & Retention of Quality STI Human Resource
2
TGS
Global Population GrowthGlobal Population Growthfrom from 1750 to 20501750 to 2050
TGS
GLOBAL POPULATION 2010
4
World 6.9 billion
Asia 4.2 billion 60%Africa 1.03 billion 15%
Europe 733 million 10%S. America 589 million 8.5%N. America 352 million 5.1%Oceania 36 million 0.5%
TGS
EXPENDITURE ON EDUCATIONUNESCO Report 2010
% OF TOTAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE (most recent)A-Sub-Saharan Africa
1. Botswana: 25.6%2. Guinea: 25.6%3. Comoros: 24.1%4. Kenya: 22.1%5. Burundi: 21.8%
B-EMERGING BIG ECONOMIES1. China: 12.9%2. India: 12.7%3. Brazil: 12%
B-ESTABLISHED BIG ECONOMIES1. UK: 11.5%2. France: 11.4%
TGS
QUALITY EDUCATION(Secondary School Enrolment Data, UNICEF 2009)
Sec Sch. Enrols.(%) Sec Sch. Enrols. Female (%)Africa 31% GDP/capita (US$) 29%Sub-Saharan Africa 30 28
Mauritius 80 6,734.50 81 South Africa 72 5,785.99 74
Kenya 49 738.05 48 Nigeria 26 1,118.11 22 Senegal 25 1,022.96 22Brazil 82 8,121.50 85UK 93 35,164.86 95France 98 41,050.89 99
TGS7
Critical Mass of Competent African Experts: Sustainable Development
Number of scientists/engineers vs. population:Africa: less than 1 per 10,000 inhabitants Uganda: 35 Radiologists for 30 million people
(1 radiologist treats 1.2 million people) ca.2.5 million new engineers are needed in SSA just to ensure provision of CLEAN WATER
and SANITATION to everyone
European Standards: 6 researchers per 10,000 inhabitants 2008 Scandinavia: 70 per 10,000 inhabitants
China: 2008 – 25 researchers per 10,000 inhabitants 2020 - 43 researchers per 10,000 inhabitants
TGS
THE AFRICAN PARLIAMENT:HEAVY INVESTMENT IN THE
EDUCATION SECTOR
PRIORITY NO. 1
QUALITY EDUCATION AT ALL LEVELS
Major Funding Sources:Government: Central & LocalPrivate SectorFoundations & other NGOs
8
TGS
21st Century Economic Prosperity = Knowledge +Technology + Innovation
9
G20ArgentinaAustralia
BrazilCanadaChinaFrance
GermanyIndia
IndonesiaItaly
JapanSouth Korea
MexicoRussia
Saudi ArabiaSouth Africa
TurkeyUK
USAEuropean Union
Share of World's papers in Science, Medicine and Engineering (20072007)
TGS
GENERATION OF KNOWLEDGE (2008)
WORLD SHARE OF SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONSA- Africa
1. Africa: 2%2. South Africa: 0.5% (PhDs: 1,200 per annum)
B-EMERGING BIG ECONOMIES1. China: 10.6%2. India: 3.7%3. Brazil: 2.7% (PhDs: 10,000 per annum)
B-ESTABLISHED BIG ECONOMIES1. UK: 7.2%2. France: 5.8%3. Germany: 7.7%4. USA: 27.7%
TGS
Generation of Knowledge: South Korea vs Africa
India vs SADC
11
2.79%
1.70%
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
SouthKorea
AllAfrica
Average: 2003-2008South Korea’s share of ISI-listed S&E papers is 1.6 times that of the entire African continent
2004-2008: WORLD’S SCIENTIFIC
PUBLICATIONS
SADC (15 COUNTIRES): 0.79% of world’s publicationsINDIA: 2.9% of world’s publications
Source: TWAS, May 2008
TGS
KNOWLEDGE FOR ECONOMIC PROSPERITY (2007)
WORLD’S PATENTS REGISTRATION (USPTO patents)A- Africa
1. Africa: 0.1%2. South Africa: 0.1%
B-EMERGING BIG ECONOMIES1. China: 4.7%2. India: 0.5%3. Brazil: 0.1%
B-ESTABLISHED BIG ECONOMIES1. UK: 2.6%2. France: 2.3%3. Germany: 6.2%4. USA: 52.2%
TGS
Patent Data on Cassava (2005-2010)
From esp@cenet-worldwide, Matheo Patent Software
TGS
AFRICA’S ECONOMIC PROSPERITY THROUGH TIME
AFRICA’S SHARES IN THE WORLD TRADE
1963 2006EXPORTS 5.7% 3.1%IMPORTS 5.2% 2.4%
TGS
THE AFRICAN PARLIAMENT:R&D BUDGETS
PRIORITY NO. 2: HEAVY INVESTMENT IN R&D
In 2008 SHARE OF GDP: GROSS DOMESTIC EXPENDITURE ON R&D (GERD) A- Africa
1. South Africa: 0.93%2. Majority of African countries range: 0.1-0.6% (>1.0 GDP?????)
B-EMERGING BIG ECONOMIES1. China: 1.5%2. India: 0.88%3. Brazil: 1.13%
B-ESTABLISHED BIG ECONOMIES1. UK: 1.88%2. France: 2.02%3. Germany: 2.63%4. USA: 2.76%
TGS
2010 Top Universities in the World: 21 September 2010
1. University of Cambridge, UK 2. Harvard University, USA3. Yale University, USA 4. University College London, UK 5. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
6.University of Oxford, UK7. Imperial College London, UK 8. University of Chicago, USA9. California Institute of Technology (Caltech) , USA 10. Princeton University, USA
Africa: No. 161 – University of Cape Town, South Africa
16
TGS
Quality Higher Education & Quality Research
University of Cape Town: Est. 01 October 1829Rank No 1 in AfricaRank No 161 in the World: QS World University RankingsNo of Students: 23, 500
Undergraduate: 15,800Postgraduate: 6,700
No of Staff: 4,500Endowment 2010: US$ 300 MillionNobel Laureates: 5 of the University's graduates
1. In 1950, Ralph Bunche, Nobel Peace Prize2. In 1951, Max Theiler, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine3. In 1979, Prof Allan McLeod Cormack, Nobel Prize in Medicine4. In 1982, Sir Aaron Klug, Nobel Prize in Chemistry5. In 2003, Prof J M Coetzee, Nobel Prize in Literature
17
TGS
THE AFRICAN PARLIAMENT: STI Focus Areas for Eradication of Poverty
African Governments and their Parliaments:1. Education: Quality at all levels2. Energy: Reliable Availability and Affordable 3. Water: Available and Affordable for domestic, agricultural and
industrial consumption4. Food & Nutrition Security5. Health Services: Quality, Reliable, Affordable6. Industrial & Agricultural Materials7. Transport: Roads, Railways, Marine, Airways8. Environmental Protection: Climate Change - Mitigation &
Adaptation9. STI Policies & Implementation: Monitoring/Evaluation/Review Plans╙►► 10. ICTs: fundamental tool for all focus areas
18
TGS
2008 WORLD ENERGY CONSUMPTION(source: www.solcomhouse.com)
% World Population % Energy Consumption
Africa 14.0 3.0India 16.6 3.1China 21.2 16.0
USA 4.6 21.0Japan 2.1 5.8Germany 1.3 3.9France 0.9 2.9UK 1.0 2.6
TGS
ELECTRICITY IN AFRICA Total World Electricity Generation by Fuel (2006)1.Coal: 41% 2. Gas: 20%3. Hydro: 16% 4.Nuclear: 15%5. Oil: 6% 6. Others: 2% Include: solar, wind, geothermal & bio-energies
The importance of coal to electricity generation worldwide is set to continue, with coal fuelling 44% of global electricity in 2030.
Coal in Electricity Generation: (1) South Africa 93% (2) Poland 92% (3) PR China 79% (4) Australia 77% (5) Kazakhstan 70% (6) India 69% (7) Israel 63% (8) Czech Rep 60% (9) Morocco 55% (10) Greece 52% (11) USA 49% (12) Germany 46%
TGS21
Energy Resources of AfricaPrimary Energy sources:♦ Coal – ca. 6% of world’s reserves, to last >300 years
Electricity Production: 4.3% Consumption: 0.5%♦ Natural Gas – ca. 8% of world’s reserves, to last >50 years
2020: Africa will account for 20% of global oil & gas discoveries
Electricity Production: 7% Consumption: 3.1%♦ Oil – ca.10% of the world’s reserves
Electricity Production: 12% Consumption: 3.4% ♦ Nuclear- Uranium reserves to last >100 years♦ Hydro-power: about 12% of the world’s total
TGS22
ENERGY FOR THE MAJORITY IN AFRICARealistic for the majority in the Developing World
Renewable Energies: Energy of the Future♦ Bio-Energies
♦ Bioethanol (Brazil produces 35% of the world’s ethanol) ♦ Biodiesel: Jatropha curcas: drylands in Africa Italy: Jatropha project, US$ 20 million, 70 hectares in Mozambique
♦ Biogas ♦ Biomass
♦ Solar: Northern Africa: Euro Desertec Solar Project, Euro 400 billion♦ Wind: (a) Red Sea (Gulf of el Zayt): Germany-200 MW (Euro 340 million), a large
wind farm in Africa, (b) South Africa: 100 MW Hopefield wind farm♦ Geothermal: Kenya (2010)-209 MW, new projects 280 MW (2012-2013)♦ Ocean – (a) waves/tides, (b) hydrocarbons on the sea-bed♦ Fusion Power: Hydrogen/Helium: Hydrogen Car in the offing
is the process driving the Sun and others in the Solar System. It generates large quantities of heat by fusing the nuclei of H or He isotopes, which may be derived from seawater.
TGS
Energy in sub-Saharan Africa (2003 to 2007)
%age of population with access to electricity (some examples)
Countries having Academies of Sciences:
1. Mauritius: 99.4% 2. South Africa: 75% 3. Ghana: 54%4. Nigeria: 46.8% 5. Senegal: 42% 6. Zimbabwe: 41.5%7. Cameroon: 29.4% 8. Kenya: 15% 9. Mozambique: 11.7%10. Uganda: 9%
November 2010: 17% of the population in Mozambique had electricity in their homes.
15% of the population in Tanzania had access to
electricity
TGS
Mauritius99.4% of the population has access to
electricity 2010 2025
Bagasse - 353.6 GWh (Biomass) 16% 17%Coal – 875 GWh 43% 40%HFO - 907.8 GWh (Heavy Fuel Oil) 37% 25%Hydro - 122.4 GWh 4% 2%Wind - 1.5 GWh 0% 8%Solar PV 0% 2%Geothermal 0% 2%Waste to Energy (Biogas) 0% 4%
╙►Total = 100%
TGS
South Africa: 2010-2030 Energy Mix75% of population has access to electricity
●Coal: 48%●Renewable Energies: 16%●Nuclear: 14%●Gas: 9%●Pumped Storage Hydroelectricity: 11%●Hydro-power (imported): 2%╙►Total = 100%
TGS
USA: 2009 Electricity Generation by source
1. Coal: 44.9%2. Natural Gas: 23.4%3. Nuclear: 20.3%4.Hydroelectric (conventional): 6.9%5. Other Renewables: 3.5%6. Petroleum: 1.0%╙►Total = 100%
TGS
GLOBAL STI RESEARCH TREND ON ENERGY
ENERGY OF THE FUTURE: (1) RENEWABLE ENERGIES
EUROPEAN STRATEGY:2007: Total power generation from the Renewable
Energy Sources accounts for 6.5% of the total2020: The target is to reach 20%
TGS
SOLAR ENERGY:Photovoltaic (PV) Solar Energy
TGS
SOLAR ENERGY: Nanosolar Cells●NANOTECHNOLOGY promises to provide a new
generation of NANOSOLAR CELLS much CHEAPER and MORE EFFICIENT than current solar cells based on silicon
●Thin-film solar panels coated with nanoparticle sheets (rolling off machines like pages of newspapers at a rate of several hundred sheets per minute) promise to reduce production costs to US$1 per Watt
29
TGS
(S Source: DLR 2009, which was derived from NASA SSE 6.0 dataset (NASA
GLOBAL SOLAR POTENTIAL (Source: DLR 2009, Derived from NASA SSE 6.0 Dataset (NASA 2009)
TGS
GLOBAL TREND: RENEWABLE ENERGIES
SOLAR AFRICAN CITIES/TOWNSMain factors motivating African cities and towns to promote and install solar energy. The market drivers include:
(1)Economic Development:Global Solar Energy market increasing by 40% every year – expected to grow from: US$13 billion to US$32 billion by 2012:
(a) Creating Local Solar Companies & Markets (b) Taxes for Central & Local Governments
TGS
GLOBAL TREND: RENEWABLE ENERGIES
SOLAR AFRICAN CITIES/TOWNS(2) Job Creation – Solar Industry Jobs are expected to
increase 26% by August 2011 in USA, compared to expected growth of 2% for the rest of the economy.
(3) Reduced Energy Costs – Solar, particularly when financed with a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA), often brings about reduction in energy costs immediately with no or low initial capital costs
(4) Climate Protection – Reduce Carbon Emissions in African cities and towns.
TGS
Wind Energy: 1980-2008
TGS
2008 DISTRIBUTION OF WORLD WIND POWER CAPACITY
TGS
(Source: GWEC – GLOBAL WIND REPORTS)
BEST EXAMPLE IN AFRICA: EGYPT
TGS
GLOBAL WATER STRESS & SCARCITY
• WATER STRESS: ╙► Annual Water Supply drops below 1,700 m3 per person• WATER SCARCITY: ╙► Annual Water Supply is below 1,000 m3 per person
2010: 1/3 of the world’s population faced water scarcity2025: 2/3 of the world’s population could face water stress
LAKE CHAD SHRIKAGE: 1964: 25,000 sq.km.2010: 2,000 sq.km.
TGS
WATER STRESS & SCARCITY IN AFRICA
Examples in Africa:(1)40% of Africa’s 1.03 billion people live in urban areas ╙►
60% of them in slums where water supply andsanitation are severely inadequate
(2) DR Congo holds 50% of Africa’s water reserve ╙► 2011: ca 75% of population has no access to safe drinking water(3) Nigeria –Global Initiative for Women & Children (GIWAC)01.12.2010: ●69 million people (ca. 46%) do not have access to safe drinking water
●103 million people (ca. 69%) do not have access to adequate sanitation facilities.
TGS
GLOBAL TREND ON WATER SCIENCERIVER BASINS OF AFRICA
TGS
GLOBAL TREND ON WATER SCIENCE Trans-boundary
Aquifers of the World:>95% of the Earth’s usable freshwater is stored
as groundwater
TGS
Saudi Arabia's Desalination Plants cost ca. US$10 billionFlickr/Waleed Alzuhair
TGS42
FOOD SECURITY & NUTRITION STRATEGY FOOD SECURITY & NUTRITION STRATEGY IN AFRICAIN AFRICA
• 1 Billion people go to bed hungry each night• Africa: 240 million people are
undernourished
TGS
AGRICULTURE IN AFRICA(Recent Facts & Figures)
●In 2008: the whole of SSA employed: 68 researchers per million economically active agricultural
population
●In 2008: Investment in agricultural R&D-Sub-Saharan Africa: US$ 1.7 billionNigeria- US$ 404 millionSouth Africa – US$ 272 millionKenya – US$ 171 million
In
TGS
Source: Beintema & Stads (2008)
0
3
6
9
12
15
1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006
Co
nsta
nt (2
005)
US
D, m
illio
ns, P
PP
adju
sted
Public spending on agricultural research, 1981-2006
Sub-Saharan Africa (45) Asia-Pacific (26)
Latin America & Caribbean (25) West Asia & North Africa (12)
Low & middle income (108) High income (32)
Low R&D Spending in AfricaAfrican Governments spend on average ca. 4.5% of their budgets on Agriculture
TGS
GLOBAL TREND: AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES & TECHNOLOGIES
Increased Expenditure on R&D:Africa’s R&D Growth: 1970s at 5.4 % per year1980s at 3.8% “1990s at 1.3% “
AU Decisions: African GovernmentsAgriculture: >10% of national budgets
╙►agricultural productivity: >6% per annumScience: >1% of GDP
the
TGS46
GLOBAL TREND: Food for Population Growth & Heavy Investment
in Commercial Farming
AGRICULTURE: 80% of Africa’s populationBest known agro-minerals of Africa:
Phosphate rocks, e.g. apatite Guano minerals: P- and N- bearing compounds Saltpetre: Na-nitrate K-salts: K-zeolites, K-micas, K-bearing volcanics Sulphates: Ca-sulphate (gypsum) Carbonates: Ca-Mg carbonates
Phosphates: Africa accounts for about 76% of World’s reserves
TGS47
GLOBAL TREND IN AGRICULTURE: BIOTECHNOLOGY
Genomics: transgenically convert C3 to C4 plants
TGS
GLOBAL TREND IN FOOD SECURITYExamples: Rice & Wheat
● Rice is the staple food for approx 50% of the world’s population. Why export minerals/oil?
● African Rice has been cultivated for 3,500 years╙► Biotechnology: approx 50,000 genes in a rice grain
● Wheat: Rain fed production: 0.3 kg/cu.m.Irrigated production: 0.8 kg/cu.m.
╙► Supplemented Irrigation production: 2.2 kg/cu.m.Balance: Irrigation (water) & agriculture (Africa?)
currently (global estimate) agriculture consumes approx 70% fresh water used
TGS
MALARIA IN AFRICA(WHO, World Malaria Report 2010)
Deaths per 100,000 population1. Togo 23.51 6,618,613 (total population)
2. Senegal 4.58 12,534,228 3. Nigeria 4.86 154,728,895 4. Cameroon 25.32 19,521,645 5. DR Congo 31.67 66,832,000 6. Rwanda 8.09 9,997,614 7. Uganda 19.25 32,709,864 8. Tanzania 1.92 43,739,052 9. Malawi 42.76 15,263,415 10.Angola 56.93 18,497,632
TGS
Summary of Disease Characteristics, Pathogen, and Current Standard of Care
Disease and pathogen Disease Burden/ annum
Population at risk Current standard of care(launch year): Limitations
Malaria: A parasitic disease caused by the pathogen Plasmodium species, of which P. falciparum is the most deadly. The pathogen is transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes.
1 million deaths
300-500 million cases
*34.7 M
40% of global population
86% in Africa
Children and pregnant women are most susceptible
-Chloroquine (1945): resistance; -Primaquin (1948): safety; -Fansidar (1961): resistance; -Mefloquine (1984): resistance, safety; -Artemisin (1994): cost, compliance, GMP; -Atovaquone (1999): cost
Tuberculosis (TB): A bacterial disease that mostcommonly affects the lungs, caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis
2 million deaths
9 million cases(active)
*46.4 M
Pandemic
2 billion have latent TB
Over 80% in sub- Sahara Immuno compromised persons
All first line drugs have issues concerning resistance, toxicity and bioavailabilitty (6-9 months)-Rifampicin (1963), -Ethambutol (1962), -Streptomycin (1955), -Pyrazinamide (1954), -Isoniazid (1952)
Sources: WHO/TDR and Hotez, P.J., et al., Control of neglected tropical diseases. N Engl J Med, 2007. 357(10): p. 1018-27.*One disability adjusted life year (DALY) is equivalent to one year of healthy life lost.Source of DALY information: WHO/TDR.
TGS51
GLOBAL TREND IN HEALTHCARENanosciences & Nanotechnologies
(Dr Hulda Swai, 2010, CSIR, South Africa
Anti-TBdrugs
Polymericshell
Smallest human cell is 2umNanoparticles diameter = 2% of a
human hair diameter
INH-loaded PLGA nanoparticles
Nano-Encapsulated TB Drugs
TGS
GLOBAL TREND IN HEALTHCAREAdvantage of Nanodrug Delivery System
• Enhanced drug stability
• Target specific tissue and cells
• Delivery through lymphatic system
• Minimised first pass metabolism
• Improved bioavailability
• Reduced toxicity of drugs
• Through slow release can reduced dosage and dose frequency
• Targeted to immune system; infectious disease
• Improves the half life
TGS
GLOBAL TREND- The NANO-enabled drug discovery market generated revenues of $1.3 billion by 2009 and will generate $2.5 billion by 2012
The Impact of Nanotechnology in Drug Discovery: Global Developments, Market Analysis and Future Prospects", by the US consultancy, NanoMarkets, Mark Phillips, 2005
TGS
GLOBAL TREND: STI & IPRsExamples for Indigenous Knowledge
●Bio-Resource Potential of Africa: The global market for plant based drugs has been estimated at $43 billion. At least 1/6th of the world’s estimated 270,000 plant species are endemic to Africa● BONN Guidelines on access to genetic resources and fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising out of their utilization (2002)
● ARIPO legal instrument of the protection of traditional knowledge and expressions of folklore (2006)● WHO/AFRO/TRM (draft) policy and regulatory framework for the protection and promotion of traditional and indigenous medicine knowledge and to access to biological resources in Africa (2006)● WIPO document on IP and genetic resources, traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expressions/folklore (2006)
● AAAS document on traditional knowledge and IP (2003)
TGS55
IMPROVEMENTS IN QUALITY OF LIFEIMPROVEMENTS IN QUALITY OF LIFE
SUSTAINED ECONOMIC GROWTHSUSTAINED ECONOMIC GROWTH
NATIONAL INNOVATION SYSTEMSNATIONAL INNOVATION SYSTEMS
HU
MA
N C
API
TAL
HU
MA
N C
API
TAL
INTE
LLEC
TUA
L PR
OPE
RTY
INTE
LLEC
TUA
L PR
OPE
RTY
www.innovationfund.ac.za
APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGIESAPPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGIES
BASIC & APPLIED SCIENCES BASIC & APPLIED SCIENCES (+(+EDUCATIONAL & RESEARCH INFRASTRUCTURE)EDUCATIONAL & RESEARCH INFRASTRUCTURE)
TGS56
GLOBAL SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH TRENDS: Future Sustainable Livelihood
Global STI trends: 10 billion people in 2050
● The Science of Climate Change: Mitigation & Adaptation● Agricultural Technologies & Industries
(i.e., Seed Research & Development)● Life & Health Sciences● Earth System Sciences (+resources, e.g., water & minerals)● Energy Resources
(i.e., Renewable Energies, Gas & Coal)● Space Sciences & Technologies● Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs)╙►►►Bio-& Nano-Sciences/Technologies
(e.g., Food & Nutrition, Water, Health and Energy)
TGS
COMMUNICATION (2008)INTERNET USERS PER 1 MILLION POPULATION
A- Africa1. Africa: 8142. South Africa: 843
B-EMERGING BIG ECONOMIES1. China: 2,2282. India: 4303. Brazil: 3,752
B-ESTABLISHED BIG ECONOMIES1. UK: 7,8392. France: 7,0683. Germany: 7,7914. USA: 7,400
TGS
GLOBAL TREND: Quality Data Information Services - Observing Systems
over 6,000 satellites in space, each lasting 15 yrs
IKONOS
QuickBird
SPIN-2SPOT 4, 5
EROS A1
EnvisatAura/Aqua/Terra
Grace
QuikScatSage
SeaWindsTRMM
Toms-EP
UARSLandsat 7
SORCE
ACRIMSAT
CBERS
SeaWiFS
ERBS
Jason
Orbview 2, 3
Radarsat ALOS
DMC
TGS
TGS
Size of Africa: Enormous & Ubiquitous Natural Resources
TGS
Re=6378 kmRe=6378 km
Rm=3397 kmRm=3397 km
MARSMARSEARTHEARTH
Earth’s MoonEarth’s Moon