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  • Hi, I'm Kelsea Brennan-Wessels

  • and you are watching Earth from Space

  • on the European Space Agency Web TV.

  • The Chinese city of Tianjin is captured in this Sentinel-1A radar image

  • created by combining three scans over several months.

  • The city sits to the west of the Bohai Bay

  • within the Bohai Gulf, off of the Yellow Sea.

  • With a population of over 14 million people,

  • this megacity is among China’s five largest.

  • Urban areas are home to over half of the world’s population,

  • and are rapidly changing environments.

  • As more people move from rural areas to cities,

  • this growth needs to be monitored to help it proceed on a sustainable basis.

  • High-resolution satellite data provide essential information for city planning

  • and for the sustainable development of urban regions.

  • Radar in particular can be used to monitor slight ground movements down to a few millimetres

  • valuable information for urban planners

  • and for risk assessment.

  • Zooming in on the upper right,

  • we can see different colours in the geometric agricultural fields,

  • showing changes between the three acquisitions that make up this image.

  • In this area, the black shapes show divided areas covered in water,

  • which are possibly shrimp or fish farms.

  • Bohai Bay was traditionally home to the country’s richest fisheries,

  • but pollution, overfishing and land reclamation has diminished this economic activity.

  • Farther south, we can see numerous dots in the water

  • radar reflections from the boats coming to and from the Port of Tianjin.

  • This massive maritime gateway handles hundreds of millions of tonnes of cargo each year,

  • and is the largest in northern China.

  • On the central-left side of the image,

  • the black and bright green areas are water reservoirs.

  • The upcoming Sentinel-2 mission

  • will be used to support the sustainable management of water resources

  • by providing measurements of water quality and detecting changes.

  • And that brings us to the end of this edition of Earth from Space.

  • Remember that we broadcast online every Friday at ten o'clock Central European Summer Time.

  • Watch us on our website or through the ESA App on your mobile device.

  • From the ESA Web TV studios, have a nice day.

Hi, I'm Kelsea Brennan-Wessels

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