press release, 01. September 2022

Satellite data reveals further details of Oder River disaster

Currently, algae are being considered as one of the possible causes of the massive fish kill in the Oder River. With frequent and precise satellite measurement data available, researchers at EOMAP were able to narrow down the course of the algae bloom in terms of time and location. According to water researchers at the Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research - UFZ, this is another important towards solving the puzzle in clarifying the causal effect chains of the environmental catastrophe. 

In order to clean up the fish kill in the Oder river, high-resolution satellite data reveil new details, such as the algae of its tributaries. The image shows the inflow of the Warthe (right) at August 3 2022, carrying twice the algae concentrations of the Oder River, thus increasing the algae level of the main river. Photo: EOMAP / Planet
In order to clean up the fish kill in the Oder river, high-resolution satellite data reveil new details, such as the algae of its tributaries. The image shows the inflow of the Warthe (right) at August 3 2022, carrying twice the algae concentrations of the Oder River, thus increasing the algae level of the main river.
Photo: EOMAP / Planet
Temporal algae bloom development along the Oder River between Lipki and Frankfurt on Oder. It clearly visualizes the bloom near Lipki, its subsequent increase at Glogow as per August 3rd and further flow until Frankfurt. Photo: EOMAP / Planet
Temporal algae bloom development along the Oder River between Lipki and Frankfurt on Oder. It clearly visualizes the bloom near Lipki, its subsequent increase at Glogow as per August 3rd and further flow until Frankfurt.
Photo: EOMAP / Planet

Three-to-five-meter Dove satellites image the entire Earth’s landmass each day, providing a more frequent capture than Sentinel-2 used so far. The 3m resolution allows for a much higher level of detail that was particularly relevant to assess the narrower river areas of the Oder.

Paired with the European Sentinel data, the detailed course of the algae bloom from Lipki to the mouth of the Oder River has now been determined. Thus, the team of EOMAP, German specialist for satellite-based environmental data of water bodies, was able to show the following on eight river sections between Lipki (Poland) and the Szczecin Lagoon (Germany):

"The algal bloom’s greatest extent was - depending on the river section - already between August 4 and 7, much earlier than previously thought. A previous algal spill at a lower intensity was already visible around July 24, 15 km south of Wroclaw but then increased to double its extent around August 3 near Glogow", reports Dr. Thomas Heege, CEO of EOMAP. 

Planet’s daily satellite images were able to show for the first time, in great accuracy, where and how quickly chlorophyll concentrations and other water quality parameters developed downstream of the Oder River over this summer", said Dr. Marcus Apel, Director of Business Development at Planet.  "We look forward to providing data to partners in support of cleaning up this environmental disaster as quickly as possible."

"Just like forensics we are investigating causal chains leading the kills of aquatic life. These highly resolved satellite data enable us to have a completely new - synoptic - view on the whole course of the river. Thus, they will be the backbone of further analysis of relevant water quality and hydro-ecological parameter sets", explained Professor Dietrich Borchardt, Head of the Research Unit "Water Resources and Environment" of Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ  (Germany).

"The new, high-resolution observation data not only enable us to fill the gaps of in-situ measurements, they also allow us to reconstruct the whole catastrophe although all water has already been gone into the sea and cannot be sampled anymore. A general advance from the high-resolution is the observation of small water bodies like tributaries or tailing ponds, which is key for tracing the causes", added Dr. Karsten Rinke, Head of the Department of Lake Research at UFZ.

EOMAP has already worked with some environmental agencies to develop and put into operation an online visualization and early warning system for water bodies. In Rhineland-Palatinate, for example, it is already being used to identify dangerous developments in water bodies in order to avert damage. 


Further information

Prof. Dr. Dietrich Borchardt
Head of the Research Unit “Water Resources and Environment” at UFZ
dietrich.borchardt@ufz.de

Dr. Thomas Heege
EOMAP GmbH & Co. KG
heege@eomap.de

UFZ press office

Susanne Hufe
Phone: +49 341 235-1630
presse@ufz.de


In the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), scientists conduct research into the causes and consequences of far-reaching environmental changes. Their areas of study cover water resources, ecosystems of the future, environmental technologies and biotechnologies, the effects of chemicals in the environment, modelling and social-scientific issues. The UFZ employs more than 1,100 staff at its sites in Leipzig, Halle and Magdeburg. It is funded by the Federal Government, Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt.

www.ufz.de

The Helmholtz Association contributes to solving major challenges facing society, science and the economy with top scientific achievements in six research fields: Energy; Earth and Environment; Health; Key Technologies; Matter; and Aeronautics, Space and Transport. With some 39,000 employees in 19 research centres, the Helmholtz Association is Germany’s largest scientific organisation.

www.helmholtz.de
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