
News
From Seeds to Satellites: Supporting Food Security Through Satellite Technology
NASA Harvest and NASA Acres, two pioneering NASA Consortia focused on food security and agriculture at global and domestic scales, respectively, recently showcased their groundbreaking contributions at the Joint NASA and USDA Seeds to Satellites exposition. The event held at the Rayburn Building in Washington, DC, served as a platform for highlighting how remotely-sensed Earth observations play a pivotal role in agriculture monitoring and in supporting food security initiatives and policies.
Eight Early-Career Scientists with NASA DEVELOP Explore Use Cases of Satellite EO for Rangelands
Earlier this spring, 8 early-career professionals with the NASA DEVELOP Program joined the NASA Acres team at Colorado State University (CSU) to complete 10-week feasibility studies focused on developing use cases for the application of satellite Earth observations (EO) for rangeland and ranch management. Tony Vorster, a research scientist in Warner College’s Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory (NREL), is the primary investigator for the NASA Acres work at CSU that the studies contributed to.
From Space to Farm to Impact: NASA's Listening Tour in Illinois
On Tuesday, April 23, NASA Acres and NASA Earth Science leadership traveled to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) campus, a top agricultural research institution, as a part of NASA’s annual Space for Agriculture Listening Tour. The Illinois tour included an Earth Science and Agricultural Research Symposium, a two-hour roundtable discussion, and a visit to UIUC’s 320-acre Energy Farm.
Getting Farmers the Most From Their Data: Ag Data Transparent and Farm Journal's Trust In Food Join Forces with NASA Acres to Move the Needle on Farm Research
Over the last decade, the potential of satellite-based Earth observation (EO) data for farmers is growing with the rich information it can reveal - frequently, and over large areas - about the conditions of vegetation, water, and soil that the naked eye cannot see. However, the direct value that it brings to farmers within their own operations is mediated by the degree to which farmers share their on-farm data with EO innovators and analysts. At the same time, collecting and sharing farmer data for research projects raises concerns about privacy and security for farmers, as they may worry about how their personal and operational information will be used and protected, and whether it might be vulnerable to breaches or misuse. This is why Ag Data Transparent (ADT) has partnered with NASA Acres to develop a set of guiding principles to be used for managing farm data in their research. These principles aim to promote beneficial and safe data collection, sharing, and use that prioritize farmers' well-being while unlocking the value of satellite data for farmers.
AGU 2023 Recap: NASA Acres Convenes Sessions on Applications of Earth Observations for Agriculture in the U.S.
The Fall Meeting by American Geophysical Union (AGU) is the premier global event dedicated to the advancement of Earth and space sciences. In December of 2023, the event convened over 25,000 attendees from more than 100 countries in San Francisco, California. This year, the conference was centered around the theme “Wide. Open. Science.”, exploring topics on expanding collaboration across disciplines and geographic barriers and discussing ways to make Earth and space data more accessible, transparent, and, ultimately, more impactful. Scientists from NASA Acres and our sister Consortium, NASA Harvest, gathered from across the United States and overseas to attend the event and host a number of oral and poster presentations focused on applications of Earth observations (EO) for agriculture.

NASA Acres In The News
