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BACKGROUND
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The European Space Agency has been managing the payload data operation of a number of Earth Observation satellites since 1975. The activity includes acquisition, archiving, processing and product distribution of data from ESA and Third Party missions, for which more than 1.5 PetaBytes of data are presently archived. The activity is performed via a distributed network of facilities located in Europe and in Canada (for ERS only) mostly belonging to National and private entities, operating on behalf of the Agency via contractual agreements. The management centre of this network of facilities is located in the ESRIN ESA centre of Frascati, near Rome, Italy.
The ESA EO activity is currently progressing with the operation of various ESA and Third Party satellites: ERS-2, Envisat, Landsat 5/7, NOAA 16/17, SeaWiFS, Spot 2/4, Terra, Aqua, Proba. Future missions are also planned to fly, which will be managed by the ESRIN EO network of centres: Cryosat, GOCE, SMOS, ADM, GMES, etc., which will substantially increase the size of the long term archive.
The normal mandate for ESA's EO missions are to maintain the archive for at least ten years after the end of the mission. The management of this vast amount of heterogeneous datasets poses problems for their long term preservation, and this is why the EO Ground Segment Department has recognized for many years the need to establish a clear strategy for the management of the long term archives.
In 2001, ESA's Programme Board on Earth Observation (PB-EO) endorsed a strategy for the "Management of Historical Archives" (ref. PB-EO(2001)4). In 2003 DOSTAG (the technical advisory board of the ESA's PB-EO) endorsed a document ESA/PB-EO/DOSTAG(2003)6 related to the Promotion of products and services across missions and exploitation of historical archives. Furthermore, in 2003 the Oxygen implementation plan (ESA/PB-EO(2003)51) has reinforced and enhanced in a wider context the overall issue of data archive and improved data sources user access and availability.
Finally, in 2004 the ad hoc nominated PB-EO Ground Segment Task Force concluded its report with a set of recommendations (ESA/PB-EO(2004)53) related to the facilities and archives infrastructure aiming at:
ESA's Earth Observation Department has since that time recognized that the main process to be undertaken is the standardization and harmonization of its ground segment architectures to reach scale economies during development, operations and maintenance. This includes the need to achieve the following goals:
It is well known that the data to be preserved for the long term require a special attention, which is reflected in costly operations for their exploitation and maintenance. Among these challenges:
One of the reasons that contribute to the high operations and maintenance costs of the long term archive is the excessive proliferation of diverse and heterogeneous data formats, caused by mainly three reasons:
Taking all this into account, in early 2004 ESA set up a project called
HARM (Historical Archives Rationalization and Management), which aimed mainly
at converting its historical datasets into a new modern format, based on the
latest technologies and standards and able to ensure the long-term
preservation of its holdings.
The format developed by the HARM project was named Standard Archive Format
for Europe (SAFE).