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A test version of the China-France Oceanography Satellite at a test centre in Beijing. Photo: AFP

First Franco-Chinese satellite project will help spot ocean storms and tackle climate change

Joint venture will help forecast cyclones and study weather patterns

Science

France and China’s space agencies unveiled their first joint satellite in Beijing on Friday, and plan to use the vessel to improve forecasting of ocean storms and cyclones.

The satellite, named CFOSAT (China-France Oceanography Satellite), is due to be launched next year by China and will primarily be used to study wind and ocean wave patterns.

Understanding the interaction between the oceans and the atmosphere will also help to model and tackle climate change, scientists said.

“In practical terms, it will be used to improve forecasts of strong storms, cyclones or waves for all coastal activities”, Daniele Hauser, a French scientist working on the project, told AFP.

The satellite will include two radars: a French system designed to measure the direction and wavelength of ocean waves, and a Chinese version focusing on wind strength and direction.

The satellite is the first to be jointly constructed by France and China.

The project was originally envisaged as a joint programme for the French and European space agencies.

But an increasingly close working relationship between France and China on space technology over the past 10 years prompted the switch to the unprecedented collaboration on CFOSAT, said Hauser, who acknowledged there was also a “political component”.

Wang Lili, China’s project manager on the satellite, said: “We partnered with France because we were certain of the support of both states, but also because of France’s expertise in wave analysis.”

The satellite will be placed into Earth’s orbit in the second half of 2018 by a rocket from China’s “Long March” programme. The project is scheduled to last three years.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: First joint China-France satellite to study oceans
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