About the program:

Global Forest Watch (GFW) is a free forest monitoring system that provides timely and actionable information to support the sustainable management and conservation of forest landscapes. Since its launch in 2015, more than 5 million users have visited the GFW website from every country in the world. GFW is used by civil society organizations, journalists, communities, governments, and companies around the world to see where, when, and why deforestation is happening and take action to address it.

Internship Highlight:

  • Contributing towards the pressing issue of forest protection, and sustainable forest management.
  • Working with new data and state of the art platforms to communicate findings on changes to forests to users.
  • Being part of the GFW team.
  • Gaining insights into how international non-profit organisations function.

    What you will do:

    In this role, you will support the development of a new ‘deforestation alert’ product, using new ‘vegetation alert’ information. This will be carried out in the context of Global Forest Watch (GFW) and the Land and Carbon Lab (LCL) of WRI. New data developed by the University of Maryland (one of Global Forest Watch’s core partners) provides near-real-time alerts for vegetation disturbances – which needs further processing to make it into useable information for GFW stakeholders. Work has already commenced to evaluate the new data, including comparing it to current near-real-time ‘deforestation’ datasets on GFW and also in savanna areas available elsewhere. This work will continue, and thresholds required to provide reliable information on forest disturbances identified. GFW currently provides annual updates on the status of the world’s forests, and the global coverage of the new product, means that quarterly updates are now potentially possible, and that law-enforcement related to deforestation can be supported around the globe. Because alert data is available for all vegetation types, learnings from assessments in forests can also be applied to other habitats.

    Your internship supervisor will be Sarah Carter, Research Associate, WRI Europe.

    Focus Area 1: Exploring the vegetation alerts product to determine thresholds and processing steps needed to use as a ‘deforestation alert’ (50%)

    • Explore the recently released vegetation alerts from the University of Maryland, which provide near-real-time on forest disturbances across the globe.
    • Provide insights in how they compare with other available alert products both inside and outside of ‘forests’
    • Prepare detailed metadata (including descriptions of methods etc.) and provide input on how to present data on GFW platform (data layers, downloadable statistics, and interactive graphs)
    • Contribute to other communications products such as blogs on the new data

      Focus Area 2:Exploring the global vegetation alerts in the context of providing quarterly updates on forest changes (50%)

Recommended for you