By Iain Todd

Published: Tuesday, 21 May 2024 at 07:58 AM


Much of what scientists know about Earth, climate change and the how global warming is affecting our planet can be gleaned from satellites in orbit.

NASA has announced it has selected four new proposed missions, which will each receive $5 million to conduct a one-year mission concept study.

The missions are tasked with helping scientists better understand the effects of climate change in relation to greenhouse gases, the ozone layer, ocean currents and melting ice and glaciers.

See more pictures of Earth from space

A view of the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica from space, as seen by the Galileo orbiter. Credit: NASA/JPL

The proposed studies are part of NASA’s Earth System Explorers Program for space missions that enable scientific observations of Earth.

NASA currently has over two dozen Earth-observing satellites and instruments in orbit, and these four new missions could be the latest additions to the ‘Earth observatory’.

The proposals will receive $5 million each for a one-year mission concept study, after which NASA will choose two proposals to go forward, with launches expected in 2030 and 2032.

Total mission cost cap is $310 million for each chosen investigation.

“The proposals represent another example of NASA’s holistic approach to studying our home planet,” says Nicky Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

“As we continue to confront our changing climate, and its impacts on humans and our environment, the need for data and scientific research could not be greater.”