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In: Wagner W., Székely, B. (eds.): ISPRS TC VII Symposium - 100 Years ISPRS, Vienna, Austria, July 5-7, 2010, IAPRS, Vol. XXXVIII, Part 7B
In: Wag
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CANASAT PROJECT: MONITORING THE SUGARCANE HARVEST TYPE IN THE STATE
OF SAO PAULO, BRAZIL
Daniel Alves de Aguiar 1 , Wagner Fernando da Silva 1 , Bernardo Friedrich Theodor Rudorff 1 , Marcos Adami 1
'National Institute for Space Research (INPE), Remóte Sensing División (DSR),
Sao José dos Campos, 12227-010, Sao Paulo State, Brazil.
{daniel; wagner; bernardo, adami}@dsr.inpe.br
KEYWORDS: burnt sugarcane; unbumt sugarcane; satellite monitoring; multitemporal analysis; environmental.
ABSTRACT
In order to increase the sustainability the ethanol production process from sugarcane, it is necessary to reduce actions that harm the
environment. One of these actions is the burning of sugarcane straw prior to harvest. In Brazil, agro-environmental protocols between
the government and the sugar-ethanol sector have been signed. The agro-environmental protocol in the state of Sao Paulo requires the
total termination of burning by 2017. To meet the objectives of the protocol, remote sensing satellite images are used to monitor and
inspect the burning reduction each season. Using satellite images, the Canasat project has mapped the harvesting method (with or
without burning) in the state of Sao Paulo since the 2006/07 season. The objective of this study is to present the methodology utilized
and to evaluate the evolution of the harvesting method between the 2006/07 and 2008/09 seasons. The harvest type was also
evaluated for each declivity class. Results demonstrated that the unbumt harvest increased from 50.9% in the 2006/07 season to
65.8% in the 2008/09 season. In the three seasons analyzed, approximately 97% of the total area available for harvest in the state is
located in areas with a favorable declivity for harvesting without burning, i.e., mechanically. The western region of the state had the
greatest expansion in sugarcane cultivated area and also the largest increases in areas of unbumt harvest.
1 .INTRODUCTION
Brazil is the world’s largest producer of sugarcane FAO (2009).
Industrial-scale production occurs primarily in the states located
in the Northeast and South-Central regions of the country. The
state of Säo Paulo, in the South-Central region, is the largest
producer in the country and was responsible for 61% of Brazil’s
sugarcane production in the 2008/09 season (UNICA, 2009).
The country is attempting to achieve sustainable ethanol
production and to obtain its socio-environmental certification
(Goldemberg, 2007; Goldemberg et al., 2008). One of the
principle goals in this endeavor is to terminate the burning of
sugarcane straw prior to harvest. Therefore, in 2007, Sao
Paulo’s State Secretary for the Environment (SMA) and
representative in the sugar-energy sector signed the agro-
environmental protocol for the sugar-ethanol sector. This
protocol decrees, among other measures, ending the burning of
sugarcane straw by 2014 in areas that are mechanically
harvested (declivity less than or equal to 12%) and by 2017 in
areas that are harvested non-mechanically (declivity greater
than 12%; http://homologa.ambiente.sp.gov.br/etanolverde
/english.asp). It is worth to mention that manual harvest of
sugarcane can only be performed by burning the straw.
In Brazil, since 2003, the National Institute for Space Research
(Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciáis - INPE), the
Industry Sugarcane Association (UNICA), the Center for
Advanced Studies on Applied Economics (CEPEA) of the Luiz
de Queiroz Agricultural School (Esalq/USP) and the Center for
Sugarcane Technology (CTC) have maintained the Canasat
project (www.dsr.inpe.br/canasat/eng/). Using remote sensing
imagery and geoprocessing techniques, the Canasat project
monitors areas planted with sugarcane. Initially, mapping was
performed only in the state of Sâo Paulo (Rudorff et al., 2005),
however since 2005, mapping has been extended to the other
five states in the South-Central region of Brazil (Rudorff and
Sugawara, 2007). These six states are responsible for 72.7% of
Brazil’s sugarcane production.
One of the project activities, in the state of Sao Paulo, is to
monitor the type of harvest (with or without burning the
sugarcane straw) performed since the 2006/07 crop season.
Information provided by the project has been utilized by both
the government and private groups. Beginning with the
2009/2010 crop season, maps depicting the type of harvest are
generated monthly and sent to the SMA of Sao Paulo State.
The SMA inspects these maps to determine if the straw burning
has been authorized.
The implementation of this protocol has contributed to
increasing the monitoring and inspection capacity of the sugar-
energy sector. Using remote sensing satellite images,
information can be obtained at multiple time-points, and
therefore providing a monitoring system for the sugarcane
production process. Furthermore, this crop is generally grown in
large areas and possesses a long phenological cycle and a long
harvest period, averaging 12 months and 8 months, respectively.
These characteristics facilitate crop identification in the images
(Abdel-Rahman and Ahmed, 2008).
The objective of this study is to present the methodology of the
Canasat project, including the monitoring of the harvesting
method, and to analyze the evolution of the harvest areas with
and without straw burning from the 2006/07 to the 2008/09 crop
season. The maps generated by the project may serve as a basis
for greenhouse gas emission models (Lara et al., 2005), carbon
storage in silos (Galdos et. al., 2009), public health studies
(Ribeiro, 2008) and as an aid to public policy in the agricultural
sector (Moraes, 2007). These maps also allow evaluating the
area of harvestable sugarcane that was not harvested due to
weather or industry constrains which is essential information for
accurate yield estimation.
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