Periodic Reporting for period 1 - USES (Understanding Social-Ecological Systems: Coupling population and satellite remotely sensed environmental data to improve the evidence base for sustainable development)
Período documentado: 2015-11-01 hasta 2017-10-31
The research is important for society because the quality and quantity of data sets such as satellite imagery are becoming increasingly common at cheaper costs. There is increasing evidence that smaller scale changes and characteristics of landscapes that can be detected in satellite imagery could be used to inform policy makers about potential socioeconomic changes in these regions. For example, in some villages, household roof material changes from straw to metal as incomes rise and peoples confidence in their medium term incomes increase. These changes roof material can be detected in fine-grained satellite images. If these changes can be detected automatically from satellite imagery it may be possible to use this information at the government level to indicate a region that is going through a positive socioeconomic change. This would have several benefits to society including reducing the costs of expensive household surveys to monitor changes between census periods (the satellite data would not replace census or household surveys but would supplement the information available to decision makers). The USES project wanted to examine if there was more to be gained by looking at fine-grained data (household level socioeconomic conditions and 2 m spatial resolution satellite imagery which means individual houses and some vehicles can be detected in the imagery).
Results indicated that our new method was better at predicting household poverty in Kenya than the traditional single polygon approach. Results also indicated that household footprint size detected from fine-grained satellite data was the most important variable for predicting household level poverty followed by the amount of bare-agricultural land in an area. These results are being used to inform future large scale grant applications to upscale our approaches to regional and national levels to see if remote sensing can be used to support government decision making for resource allocations. Other results include, an overview of the changes in household socioeconomic conditions during a 10 year period in Kenya and Tanzania and overview of changes in the environmental conditions (derived from satellite imagery) during the same time period.
An additional outcome was the development of a working relationship between the researcher an international non-governmental organisation discussing how remote sensing data could be used to monitor and evaluate international development projects. The results from the USES project cover only small case study sites which are too small to have an impact on government policy at the moment as there would be questions over upscaling to regional and national levels. Working with an NGO has helped us to consider ideas for upscaling the methods in the future. We are currently working with IFAD to develop new projects that re-use IFAD household survey to further test the ways in which remote sensing data can be used to supplement information in surveys and potentially be used in the future for monitoring changes in socioeconomic conditions