41 min

Geospatial Support for the UN World Food Programme The MapScaping Podcast - GIS, Geospatial, Remote Sensing, earth observation and digital geography

    • Earth Sciences

So you might be wondering why the United Nations World Food Programme needs a geospatial support unit. Let me give you a brief overview, 
 
Basically, they curate and maintain global datasets that they use to model the risk of sudden-onset disasters than might lead to a food security risk. They use this model to send out early warnings to at-risk communities and help with the response when disasters happen. 
 
Of course, there is more to it ...
 
But I will let Rohini Sampoornam Swaminathan ( The head of the Geospatial Support Unit at the UN World Food Programme)  explain it in more detail.
 
The Hunger Map
https://hungermap.wfp.org/
 
BeforeAfterMap OSM Before-After Maps is an online tool that allows anyone to easily compare how a particular area looked in terms of OpenStreetMap (OSM) data at two different years, side by side, and get a visual insight into mapping contributions over time.
https://beforeafter.baato.io/
 
 
 
 

So you might be wondering why the United Nations World Food Programme needs a geospatial support unit. Let me give you a brief overview, 
 
Basically, they curate and maintain global datasets that they use to model the risk of sudden-onset disasters than might lead to a food security risk. They use this model to send out early warnings to at-risk communities and help with the response when disasters happen. 
 
Of course, there is more to it ...
 
But I will let Rohini Sampoornam Swaminathan ( The head of the Geospatial Support Unit at the UN World Food Programme)  explain it in more detail.
 
The Hunger Map
https://hungermap.wfp.org/
 
BeforeAfterMap OSM Before-After Maps is an online tool that allows anyone to easily compare how a particular area looked in terms of OpenStreetMap (OSM) data at two different years, side by side, and get a visual insight into mapping contributions over time.
https://beforeafter.baato.io/
 
 
 
 

41 min