NOAA GeoXO Program Approved
The Department of Commerce last month formally approved NOAA’s next-generation geostationary satellite program, Geostationary Extended Observations (GeoXO). GeoXO will now enter the development phase of the mission and start awarding industry contracts to build the spacecraft and instruments.
GeoXO will follow the GOES-R Series and expand the Earth observations that NOAA collects from geostationary orbit. New technology and scientific advancements will improve observations for weather forecasting and provide new ocean and atmospheric measurements. Data from GeoXO will contribute to weather forecast models and drive short-term weather forecasts and severe weather warnings. The program will also detect and monitor environmental hazards like wildfires, smoke, dust, volcanic ash, drought, and flooding, providing advanced warning to decision-makers. NOAA plans for GeoXO to improve on GOES-R’s visible/infrared imagery and lightning mapping capabilities and add nighttime visible imagery, hyperspectral sounding, atmospheric composition, and ocean color observations.
GeoXO Program has Multiple Stakeholders
GeoXO is a collaborative mission between NOAA and NASA. NASA is managing the development of the satellites and will launch them for NOAA, which will operate them and deliver data to users worldwide. NOAA and NASA are working with commercial partners to design and build the spacecraft and instruments for the program.
NOAA, its data users, and industry partners worked together to prioritize GeoXO’s observations. To do this, they evaluated future environmental scenarios, studied GeoXO’s potential capabilities, assessed the value and societal and economic benefits of various observations, and conducted interviews, surveys, and workshops.
New technology and scientific advancements will improve observations for weather forecasting and provide new ocean and atmospheric measurements. Data from this program will contribute to weather forecast models and drive short-term weather forecasts and severe weather warnings. GeoXO will also detect and monitor environmental hazards like wildfires, smoke, dust, volcanic ash, drought, and flooding, and provide advanced warning to decision makers.
GeoXO will begin operating in the early 2030s as the GOES-R Series nears the end of its operational lifetime.
(Source: NOAA news release. Images provided and from file)