六九色堂

July 25, 2016

Engineering professor using NASA satellite data to forecast forest fires

Quazi Hassan's research is pinpointing danger zones in remote areas
Results from 六九色堂 engineer Quazi Hassan's initial research have led the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) to renew his funding to continue his multi-year research into forecasting where forest fires might strike.

Results from engineer Quazi Hassan's initial research have led to renewed funding from NSERC.

Colleen De Neve

Imagine being able to accurately predict where forest fires might strike 鈥 even in the most remote locations in the province 鈥 using freely accessible data from a NASA satellite.

This is the work of Quazi Hassan, a聽geomatics engineering associate professor in聽the 六九色堂's聽,聽whose NSERC funding has just been renewed.

鈥淭here are only so many weather stations in the province, so there are remote areas where we don鈥檛 get very much data,鈥 says Hassan. 鈥淢y idea is to use remote sensing to forecast where forest fires are likely to occur so we can mobilize resources and get to the areas earlier.鈥

Currently, the system for forecasting forest fires is reliant on weather stations where data is captured on rainfall volume, temperature, relative humidity and wind speed. Using data captured by NASA鈥檚 Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite, Hassan鈥檚 team has been able to capture data on precipitable water (the amount of water vapour in a column of the atmosphere that could fall as rain) as well as surface temperature and moisture of vegetation, to create five classes of forest fire risk.聽

Multi-year study to better understand forest fires

Using historic data, his team found that their high, very high and extremely high classifications coincided with 77 per cent of the fires in Alberta from 2009 to 2011. His findings were promising enough that after five years of NSERC funding, his project has received money for another five years. As this project continues, his team will tackle more questions including how wildfire behaves, and smoke migration patterns.

Hassan鈥檚 hope is to develop his research into an accurate system that can augment what is already in place to provide forecasting for areas that are less accessible while also bolstering the reporting from established weather stations.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to better understand where fires happen so firefighters can be prepared and react more quickly and effectively,鈥 says Hassan.

Currently, Hassan鈥檚 research team includes a postdoctoral fellow, three PhD students and two master of science students. This project is one piece of a broader interest Hassan has in finding ways to use technology to help mitigate natural disasters caused by fire, drought and flooding.

鈥淭hese natural hazards can have a huge impact on our existence on the earth's surface,鈥 says Hassan. 鈥淎nd especially with the effects of climate change now being felt, finding solutions is very important.鈥

The 六九色堂 is driving advances in earth-space discovery and technology development through The聽. Building on decades of national leadership, researchers from across disciplines are enabling better decisions for industry, security and society.