Scientists who rely on Landsat imagery applauded the White House decision to build and launch a dedicated new land observation satellite, but still worry that the current Landsat 7 spacecraft will not last until its replacement is safely on orbit.

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy issued a memo Dec. 23 stating the administrationโ€™s intent to construct a free-flying Landsat satellite. Previous plans called for adding a Landsat-type camera to the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS), a new generation of weather satellites whose projected costs have soared .

โ€œI think thereโ€™s no question this had to happen,โ€ said Samuel Goward, a geography professor at the University of Maryland in College Park who co-chairs the National Satellite Land Remote Sensing Data Archive Advisory Committee. โ€œThe problems with NPOESS were growing so big it was almost impossible not to move in this direction.โ€

But Goward is concerned that the change of plans may be too late to avert a multi year break in Landsat imagery collection, threatening an uninterrupted photographic record spanning more than three decades of natural and human-induced changes to the Earthโ€™s land surface.

โ€œMy guess is that weโ€™re probably going to see the failure of Landsats 5 and 7 in the next year or two years. Itโ€™s going to take a few years to procure the new mission. It looks like itโ€™s a multi year data gap weโ€™re facing,โ€ Goward said. โ€œAnd some people already have a gap,โ€ he said, referring to the fact that Landsat 7 has been returning degraded imagery since its main instrument malfunctioned in 2003.

Landsat 5, meanwhile, has been out of service since November when its back-up solar array drive began behaving erratically , preventing the 20-year-old satellite from keeping its arrays constantly facing the Sun.

Jay Feuquay , director of the Land Remote Sensing program of the U.S. Geological Survey , which has management responsibility for Landsat , said Jan. 4 the flight team has been testing a new operating scheme that should enable Landsat 5 to resume operations by the end of February. Some initial test imaging was planned for the week of Jan. 12 , he said.

โ€œWe remain optimistic weโ€™ll be able to do more than a token return to operation, that weโ€™ll be able to, if not fully, at least substantially resume operations,โ€ Feuquay said.

Given the probability that both of the current Landsat spacecraft will cease operating sometime during the two to three years it likely will take to build a replacement satellite, Landsat users are bracing for a potentially lengthy data gap.

Kass Green, president of the Alta Vista Co., a Berkeley, Calif.-based firm which provides information products derived from remote sensing imagery, said there are other sources of imagery, such as European and Indian Earth observation satellites. โ€œBut itโ€™s really upsetting,โ€ she said of the Landsat situation. โ€œIโ€™ve got clients that are not going to pay that kind of money, even government clients.โ€

Goward said foreign satellites can help cushion the blow of not having a healthy Landsat spacecraft operating, but cautioned that these alternatives are less than ideal. He added that โ€ there are lots of uncertainties on whether weโ€™d be able to get the observations we need for global and regional studies.โ€

Despite the looming gap, Green said the White House decision to launch a dedicated satellite has brought sighs of relief from a user community grown accustomed to low-cost Landsat data provided by the U.S. government. โ€œPeople have started to do so much with Landsat data. Once it became a public good again, computers got faster, and we got much better software to process the data,โ€ she said. โ€œOnce that all came together, we started to see a huge increase in both private and government usage, and then you get NASA starting to back away from it, and its funding in trouble. It was a difficult year to go through, but Iโ€™m really, really happy with this commitment.โ€

Green, along with Kurt Allen, president of the Management Association for Private Photogrammetric Surveyors , also applauded the fact that the White House memo addresses the issue of long-term Landsat data continuity. โ€œIt remains the goal of the U.S. government to transition the Landsat program from a series of independently planned missions to a sustained operational program funded and managed by a U.S. Government operational agency or agencies, international consortium, and/or commercial partnership,โ€ the memo said.

โ€œWeโ€™re really happy that [the Office of Science and Technology Policy] directed the [National Science and Technology] council to coordinate a long-term plan for imaging,โ€ Allen said. โ€œI think thatโ€™s going to be an important roadmap for the future, and hopefully the White House will also see the geospatial community is speaking with one voice.โ€

But Goward thinks the memoโ€™s wording still leaves things uncertain.

โ€œItโ€™s basically saying that we have to somehow figure out how to make an operational system,โ€ Goward said. โ€œThatโ€™s open-ended. I worry whether this could leave us in the same situation weโ€™ve been in for 30 years โ€ฆ everything ultimately becomes associated with dollars โ€” whoโ€™s going to get the budget authority to execute such an operational system? It does need to be addressed.โ€

Comments: mfrederick@space.com