The use of remote sensing methods for monitoring and assessing the scale of destruction during the war on the example of the southern regions of Ukraine

Fixation, Monitoring & Assessment of War Consequences and Post-War Reconstruction (NEW)

Authors

First and Last Name Academic degree E-mail Affiliation
Yevhen Butenko Ph.D. evg_cat [at] ukr.net The National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine The Land Management Institute of National Academy of Agrarian Sciences of Ukraine
Kyiv, Ukraine
Halyna Shtogryn Ph.D. galinastogrin [at] gmail.com The Land Management Institute of National Academy of Agrarian Sciences of Ukraine
Kyiv, Ukraine
SERHII Petrychenko No bim11 [at] ukr.net The National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine
Kyiv, Ukraine
Valerii Olishevskyi No valera-olishevskiy [at] ukr.net The Land Management Institute of National Academy of Agrarian Sciences of Ukraine
Kyiv, Ukraine
Khrystyna Vasylenko No vasylenkokh [at] gmail.com The National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine
Kyiv, Ukraine

I and my co-authors (if any) authorize the use of the Paper in accordance with the Creative Commons CC BY license

First published on this website: 20.08.2024 - 11:19
Abstract 

It is argued that remote sensing methods are currently indispensable for monitoring and assessing the scale of destruction caused by the war in the southern regions of Ukraine. It is substantiated that the application of GIS methods allows for subsequent analysis and forecasting, which are critical for understanding the environmental and socio-economic consequences of the war. Attention is focused on the fact that the use of spectrometers on NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites has revealed significant changes in the Vegetation Condition Index (VCI) in regions affected by the destruction of the Kakhovka Reservoir. It is emphasized that the monitoring and analysis conducted in the affected southern regions of Ukraine have identified a negative change in vegetation cover on agricultural lands due to the reduction in water supply, which will lead to irreversible processes for the region's ecosystem.

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