| By Marketwire . | Article Rating: |
|
| June 18, 2009 04:37 AM EDT | Reads: |
555 |
STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN -- (Marketwire) -- 06/18/09 --
* Global Humanitarian Forum, Ericsson, WMO, and Zain and other mobile operators to deploy up to 5,000 automatic weather stations in mobile network sites across Africa, where less than 300 are reporting today * Partnership will increase dissemination of weather information via mobile phones to users and communities, including remote farmers and fishermen * First 19 stations deployed more than double Lake Victoria region weather monitoring, where 5,000 people die every year due to storms and accidents
The Global Humanitarian Forum and its President, former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, together with Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC), the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), mobile telecommunications company Zain, and the Earth Institute at Columbia University, today announced a major initiative, dubbed "Weather Info for All", to radically improve Africa's weather monitoring network in the face of the growing impact of climate change.
A recent Global Humanitarian Forum report estimated that climate change is responsible for some 300,000 deaths each year and over USD 100 billion worth of economic losses, mainly because of shocks to health and agricultural productivity. Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for close to a quarter of these losses, and is the region at the most immediate risk of droughts and floods. Agricultural yields in some areas are expected to fall by 50 percent as early as 2020.
The Global Humanitarian Forum initiated this collaboration in response to Africa's severe gap in weather information highlighted at the Forum's first annual event. The members of the initiative will deploy up to 5,000 new automatic weather observation stations across Africa, intending to provide a massive increase in crucial information to predict and manage climate shocks.
Africa has a network eight times below the WMO minimum recommended standard, and less than 200 weather stations that meet WMO observation requirements, compared to several thousand each in Europe, North America, and parts of Asia. The 5,000 weather stations will be installed at new and existing mobile network sites throughout the continent over coming years, in what promises to save lives and bring increased economic opportunity to tens of millions of people.
An innovative public-private partnership on a unique scale, the initiative relies on the core business of telecom. Ericsson, the world's leading provider of telecommunications equipment and services, will tap relationships with African operators such as Zain, who will host the weather equipment at mobile network sites being rolled out across Africa. Achieving the 5,000 target would require additional operator commitment and external financing.
The launch was held at the Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, where Kofi Annan said: "The world's poorest are also the world's most vulnerable when it comes to the impact of climate change, and the least equipped to deal with its consequences. Today you find cell phone towers in almost every part of Africa. We have never been able to establish weather monitoring on that scale, until now. By bringing together the expertise and resources of different public and private actors, this project may help to save lives and improve the livelihoods of communities in Africa living on the frontlines of climate change."
Also present at the launch, Carl-Henric Svanberg, President and CEO of Ericsson, said: "As the leading provider of telecommunications in Africa and active on the continent for more than 100 years, we are driving the rapid expansion of mobile communications. This initiative presents a unique opportunity to simultaneously help mitigate the impact of climate change for those most affected and to strengthen weather networks and systems across the continent. We look forward to having more operators come on board to realize the full impact of the initiative."
Mobile networks provide the necessary connectivity, power and security to sustain the weather equipment. Through its Mobile Innovation Center in Africa, Ericsson will also develop mobile applications to help communicate weather information developed by national meteorological and hydrological services (NMHSs) via mobile phones. Mobile operators will maintain the automatic weather stations and assist in the transmission of the data to national met services.
The initial deployment, already begun in Zain networks, focuses on the area around Lake Victoria in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. The first 19 stations installed will double the weather monitoring capacity of the Lake region.
Zain CEO Saad Al Barrak commented: "It is truly wonderful that many communities across Africa will now have accurate meteorological information readily available. Here we can see how mobile communications can play a key role in helping to improve both the quality of life and safety for people in the remotest parts of the world."
Approximately 70 percent of Africans rely on farming for their livelihood, or close to 700 million people, and over 95 percent of Africa's agriculture depends on rainfall. Changing weather patterns due to climate change render obsolete traditional knowledge relating to agriculture otherwise reliable for centuries, creating a great need for meteorological information.
Also present at the Geneva launch was Michel Jarraud, Secretary-General of the WMO, the United Nations System's authoritative voice on Weather, Climate and Water, which is coordinating involvement of NMHSs participating in the initiative. Jarraud said:
"For food production, almost every decision is linked to weather, climate and water parameters. We see the Weather Info for All initiative as a major pan-African effort to empower our 188 Members to provide enhanced weather information and services. Working through NMHSs, WMO will identify weather information needs, advise on technical requirements and help disseminate the information. This initiative may prove to be one of the most important for African meteorology in decades. The project will also therefore support the goals of the WMO-organized World Climate Conference-3, to be held from 31 August to 4 September 2009 in Geneva."
The initiative will have an impact far beyond agriculture and disaster preparation as it also includes assistance to national meteorological services in training and technical capacities. Better weather information will also make possible the development of services, such as microinsurance, which can be based on weather data indexes, such as rainfall. The initiative will also increase the volume of information useful for scientists, as well as for the water, transport and energy industries.
While the weather information gap is particularly acute in Africa, the initiative would be open to later expansion into other affected regions.
A further partner in the initiative is Columbia University's Earth Institute, headed by Jeffrey Sachs. To help with distribution to some of the most vulnerable and poorest parts of Africa and in partnership with the Earth Institute, automatic weather stations will also be installed in Millennium Villages - rural development projects spread throughout 10 countries and focused on achieving the Millennium Development Goals. By leveraging the expertise of Earth Institute scientists on climatology, agriculture, and health, the project hopes to identify key areas where there can be an immediate impact contributing a sizable knowledge bank to the effort.
"The Earth Institute is a proud partner in this highly innovative program," said Jeffrey Sachs, director of the institute. "Once the switch is turned on, a flow of extensive weather data will become available throughout Africa, with benefits extending from the national policy makers to the smallholder farmers. The Millennium Villages is a perfect launch site for the practical and timely application of weather data to bolster resilience and sustainable development in sub-Saharan Africa."
Notes to editors:
Photo library: www.ericsson.com/ericsson/press/photos/weather.shtml
Multimedia content will be available at the Ericsson broadcast room: www.ericsson.com/broadcast_room
Global Humanitarian Forum and its report Human Impact Report: Climate Change - The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis available at: www.ghf-ge.org/programmes/human_impact_report/index.cfm, www.ghf-ge.org
For more information about WMO and the World Climate Conference 3: www.wmo.int
Ericsson is the world's leading provider of technology and services to telecom operators. Ericsson is the leader in 2G, 3G and 4G mobile technologies, and provides support for networks with over 1 billion subscribers and has a leading position in managed services. The company's portfolio comprises of mobile and fixed network infrastructure, telecom services, software, broadband and multimedia solutions for operators, enterprises and the media industry. The Sony Ericsson and ST-Ericsson joint ventures provide consumers with feature-rich personal mobile devices.
Ericsson is advancing its vision of "to be the prime driver in an all-communicating world" through innovation, technology, and sustainable business solutions. Working in 175 countries, more than 75,000 employees generated revenue of SEK 209 billion (USD 32.2 billion) in 2008. Founded in 1876 with the headquarters in Stockholm, Sweden, Ericsson is listed on OMX NASDAQ, Stockholm and NASDAQ New York.
www.ericsson.com www.ericsson.mobi www.twitter.com/ericssonpress FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT Ericsson Ericsson Corporate Public & Media Relations Phone: +46 10 719 69 92 E-mail: press.relations@ericsson.com Global Humanitarian Forum Keith Collins Phone: +41 22 919 75 48, +41 76 703 53 33 Annika Hartmann Phone: +41 22 919 75 17 Matthew McKinnon Phone: +41 79 500 35 08 Email: media@ghf-ge.org World Meteorological Organization (WMO) Carine Richard-Van Maele (Chief, Communications and Public Affairs) Phone: +41 (0) 22 730 83 15 Email: cvanmaele@wmo.int Gaëlle Sévenier Phone: +41 (0) 22 730 8417 Email: gsevenier@wmo.int Lisa Muñoz Phone: +41 (0) 22 730 82 Email: lmunoz@wmo.int The Earth Institute at Columbia University Xkyu-Young Lee Phone: +1 646 337 3528 Email: klee@ei.columbia.edu Zain Mwambu Wanendeya Phone: +973 3603 5799 Email: Mwambu.wanendeya@zain.com
This announcement was originally distributed by Hugin. The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
Weather for all initiative: http://hugin.info/1061/R/1323500/310555.pdf
Copyright © Hugin AS 2009. All rights reserved.
Published June 18, 2009 Reads 555
Copyright © 2009 Ulitzer, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Marketwire .
Copyright © 2009 Marketwire. All rights reserved. All the news releases provided by Market Wire are copyrighted. Any forms of copying other than an individual user's personal reference without express written permission is prohibited. Further distribution of these materials is strictly forbidden, including but not limited to, posting, emailing, faxing, archiving in a public database, redistributing via a computer network or in a printed form.
- From Big Bang to Big Data
- No April Fool's Joke: Monsanto Voted Biggest "Corporate Fool" With the Worst Business Practices for 2012
- European Online Recruitment Registers Annual Growth of 8%, According to the Monster Employment Index
- MobileStockPicks.com Volume Watch List: -- Stevia First Corp. (OTCBB: STVF), Cannabis Science, Inc. (OTCBB: CBIS), Kinder Morgan, Inc. (OTCBB: KMIIV), Sunpeaks Ventures, Inc. (OTCBB: SNPK)
- Serica Energy plc-2011 Annual Report to Shareholders
- Field Mobility and M2M News Weekly – Week of April 8, 2012
- It's Time to Consider Human Capital Again
- Government of Canada Invests in High-Quality Jobs and Growth
- 2012 Edison Awards Winners Announced
- Gaikai stellt erste Cloud-Gaming Facebook-App vor: Streaming von Spielen in Konsolenqualität für über 400 Mio. Nutzer
- Governor General's Itinerary for the Visits to Brazil, Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago
- Gaikai Launches First Ever Cloud Gaming Facebook App, Streaming Console-Quality Games to 400M+ Users
- SXPad, Psion EP10, Harris RF-3590 and More
- From Big Bang to Big Data
- Seven Hot Security Companies to Watch
- No April Fool's Joke: Monsanto Voted Biggest "Corporate Fool" With the Worst Business Practices for 2012
- Fuel Up to Play 60 Report Card: Initial Data Shows Progress in Helping to Create Healthier Schools
- European Online Recruitment Registers Annual Growth of 8%, According to the Monster Employment Index
- MobileStockPicks.com Volume Watch List: -- Stevia First Corp. (OTCBB: STVF), Cannabis Science, Inc. (OTCBB: CBIS), Kinder Morgan, Inc. (OTCBB: KMIIV), Sunpeaks Ventures, Inc. (OTCBB: SNPK)
- Serica Energy plc-2011 Annual Report to Shareholders
- Field Mobility and M2M News Weekly – Week of April 8, 2012
- PA Liquor Control Board Invites Guests to Explore "Hawaii: Islands of Aloha" During the 2012 Philadelphia International Flower Show
- NewsGator Among KMWorld's 100 Companies That Matter in Knowledge Management for Fourth Consecutive Year
- Jaspersoft Closes Record Fiscal Year
- Zynga’s FarmVille Becomes Largest and Fastest Growing Social Game Ever
- 22nd Annual ROTH OC Growth Stock Conference Presenter Profiles
- Developing Countries in the Cloud
- I Like Ants - Grand Masters of Business Opportunity
- Rohati Systems Extends Security Solutions to Virtualized Data Centers and Clouds
- Telco Cloud Services – Cloud Service Innovation Platform
- AspectDSC Brings Real Time Global Commodities Data To iPhone
- Life Without Internet in Ethiopia
- New Social Media Marketing & Sales Channel
- When Elasticity Is a Bad Thing
- Oracle Develops Trimble GeoManager Extension
- Musings on Oracle & Sun

















Ulitzer content is offered under Creative Commons "Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives" License.
For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work.
The best way to do this is with a link to this web page.
Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get written permission from Ulitzer, Inc., the copyright holder.
Nothing in this license impairs or restricts the author's moral rights.