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October 10, 2007 17:59 PM
Malaysia Gets China Satellite Data Receiving System
By Tham Choy Lin
BEIJING, Oct 10 (Bernama) -- Malaysia has received a one-stop satellite data collection and delivery system from China which will further boost capability to monitor changes to the Earth including hotspots from forest fires and climate change.
It is among a second batch of 11 countries to receive the Feng Yun Satellite Data Broadcasting System (FENGYUNCast) at a ceremonial handover held Wednesday at the Central Meteorological Administration (CMA) headquarters in the Chinese capital.
FENGYUNCast which covers the whole of the Asia Pacific was developed by CMA since 2003. It distributes data from Chinese and international satellites of similar application to user countries in the Asia Pacific via a telecommunication satellite.
Lim Juay Jin, deputy chief of the Malaysian mission in Beijing, received the system on the country's behalf.
Alui Bahari, deputy director-general for application of Malaysia's Meteorological Department, said FENGYUNCast will help cut down costs of receiving and processing data from separate satellites.
"Malaysia gets satellite data from five different units now, two each from China and the United States and one from Japan. We had to purchase different systems for the different satellites.
"With FENGYUNCast, we'll be able to receive data from all five with one system only. It'll strengthen our satellite ground receiving stations in receiving data and information on a real-time basis," said Alui who is attending a seminar here in conjunction with the handover to learn more about the use of FengyunCast.
FENGYUNCast is a component of the worldwide intergovernmental GEONETCast which is leading efforts to build a global Earth observation system to enhance data delivery aimed at reducing and preventing disasters, improving human health, management of energy, water, agriculture and biodiversity, weather forecast and assessing climate change.
Malaysia's National Space Agency is a member of Group on Earth Observations (GEO).
The other countries which received the system were Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Nepal, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Vietnam. Last year, it was donated to Bangladesh, Indonesia, Iran, Mongolia, Pakistan and Thailand.
-- BERNAMA