
US: The United States feels grateful toย European Union for its assistance during a season of intense and record-breaking storms.ย U.S. emergency managers have once again benefited from information provided by the European Unionโs Copernicus Earth observation program. Copernicusโs Earth observation satellites, known as Sentinels, generate images used to produce flood-extent maps, which are critical for emergency respondersโ assessments of a storm or floodโs severity.
In October, when Hurricane Michael became the most powerful storm on record to hit the Florida Panhandle, the Copernicus Emergency Management Service (EMS) published over 25 flood-extent maps, which the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) used to assess the full impact of this storm on affected states in the Southeast. The Copernicus EMS also provided U.S. responders support in the wake of Typhoon Mangkhut, which struck Guam in the Pacific, and Hurricane Florence in the Carolinas, and in 2017, Copernicus provided over 30 flood-extent map products for U.S. territories affected by successive tropical storms.
U.S. emergency managers have found great value in the near-real-time, geospatial analytical products prepared by the Copernicus operation centers in Europe.