Planet Labs announced that Justdiggit is leveraging Planetโs high-resolution SkySat satellite tasking capabilities, their near-daily PlanetScope satellite imagery, and the Planetary Variables data feeds to quantify, evaluate, and scale their regreening projects.
By leveraging this cutting-edge technology, these two organizations are lending scientific credibility and concrete metrics to nature-based solutions.
Planet offers unique remotely-sensed insights and satellite tasking capabilities through their subscription-based satellite data platform, enabling customers like Justdiggit to gain an advanced awareness of the changing world we live in.
Aptly named, Justdiggit supports local farmers and pastoralists in Tanzania and Kenya to use accessible tools, like shovels, to dig bundsโsemi-circular shaped pits that help the soil capture rainwater. In regions impacted by drought and loss of natural vegetation, the top layer of soil can harden and act as a seal, but by digging through the dry layer, rain water can trickle down and hydrate the parched land.
This ancient regenerative practice cools down the temperature of the region by allowing native grasses and trees to grow back, and this landscape change can be captured by Planetโs satellite imagery. Justdiggit uses mobile technology, data, and communication to scale up their impact on the African continent and to create awareness around nature-based solutions world-wide.
“Building the futures that we want will require us to live not only sustainably, but restoratively,โ said Andrew Zolli, Chief Impact Officer at Planet. โThe surest path to doing so is to support culturally relevant and ecologically proven practices with new tools, and thatโs exactly whatโs happening here. We couldnโt be prouder to see our data, products and services used in this way.”
With 300,000 hectares under regreening, Justdiggit and their partners have already brought back over 10 million trees in sub-Saharan Africa. Over the last year, Planet, the European Space Agency (ESA), the University of Leicester, and Justdiggit launched the Restore-IT project, focused on evaluating and quantifying the success of their regreening initiatives.
In this project, Justdiggit leveraged Planetโs PlanetScope and Planetary Variables products to measure the impact of their restoration sites in Tanzania and Kenya.
Through PlanetScopeโs imagery scan, captured at 3 meter resolution, Justdiggit received high temporal resolution data of their sites, helping to evaluate discrete change over time.
The Planetary Variables metrics quantified soil water content and land surface temperature, enabling Justdiggit to evaluate how many liters of water were retained by the soil, how many degrees the surface cooled down, and how much vegetation increased since the bunds were dug.
Beyond this project, Justdiggit is also tasking Planetโs high-resolution SkySat satellites, allowing Justdiggit to view the scale of their regreening efforts overtime, visualizing the landscape change at 50 cm resolution.
โThe key is in showing the impact long term and at the landscape level,โ said Sander de Haas, Chief Technical Officer and Regreening Expert at Justdiggit, explaining that Planet data was used throughout the restoration process โ from planning to evaluation โ and provided valuable data for reporting comprehensive metrics to donors and partners.
โI focus on site selection, trying to identify from a remote sensing analysis which sites are suitable for our types of interventions. By having access to SkySat data, we are able to task imagery of the site. If indeed, this is an interesting site, we then send out a team to check on the situation on the ground, take samples, and talk to the community,โ continued de Haas.
On the ground, pastoralists live with their livestock while wildlife, like zebras and gazelles, graze on the newly sprouting grasses from the bunds.
Planetโs SkySat imagery captures the scale of the landscape regreening over months, while their Planetary Variables datasets help evaluate where regions are having success – lending scientific insights for the improvement of future projects.