Special visits to global organizations such as NASA Headquarters and the Global Environment Facility (GEF) / Professors and students of the Department of Climate Technology Convergence and the Department of Forest Resources
- 24.12.24 / 이정민
Graduate students from the Department of Climate Technology Convergence and the Department of Forest Resources at Kookmin University (President Jung Seung-ryul) and Professor Lim Chul-hee (Department of Forest Environment Systems) visited the headquarters of NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) in Washington, D.C. and the World Bank and the Global Environment Facility (GEF) from December 8 to December 13 to discuss research using satellites and the role and utilization of climate change response funds.
This special visit, which was conducted as a global insight program of the Center for the Training of Professionals for the Integrated Management of Landslides (Director Lee Chang-bae), focused on landslide detection and restoration using NASA satellites and global cooperation in forestry through global funds.
Professor Lim Chul-hee of the Department of Forest and Environmental Systems, who organized this schedule, is a partner institution of NASA's LCLUC (Land Cover and Land Use Change) Program and is conducting research on land use change using satellites with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).
Through this visit, the Department of Forest and Environmental Systems has expanded the role of Kookmin University in NASA's Southeast Asia Research Initiative (SARI) and has been able to increase students' understanding of entering international organizations in the environmental field.
Professor Lim said, “Satellites play an important role in responding to climate change, such as monitoring climate disasters and managing carbon sinks, so we will strengthen our cooperation with NASA research teams in the future and actively expand our environmental cooperation projects using global funds.”
Starting this year, the Kookmin University Center for Training Professionals in Integrated Landslide Management, designated by the Korea Forest Service, plans to continue to promote the Global Insight Program to strengthen the global capabilities of participating graduate students.
This content is translated from Korean to English using the AI translation service DeepL and may contain translation errors such as jargon/pronouns. If you find any, please send your feedback to kookminpr@kookmin.ac.kr so we can correct them.
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Special visits to global organizations such as NASA Headquarters and the Global Environment Facility (GEF) / Professors and students of the Department of Climate Technology Convergence and the Department of Forest Resources |
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Graduate students from the Department of Climate Technology Convergence and the Department of Forest Resources at Kookmin University (President Jung Seung-ryul) and Professor Lim Chul-hee (Department of Forest Environment Systems) visited the headquarters of NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) in Washington, D.C. and the World Bank and the Global Environment Facility (GEF) from December 8 to December 13 to discuss research using satellites and the role and utilization of climate change response funds.
This special visit, which was conducted as a global insight program of the Center for the Training of Professionals for the Integrated Management of Landslides (Director Lee Chang-bae), focused on landslide detection and restoration using NASA satellites and global cooperation in forestry through global funds.
Professor Lim Chul-hee of the Department of Forest and Environmental Systems, who organized this schedule, is a partner institution of NASA's LCLUC (Land Cover and Land Use Change) Program and is conducting research on land use change using satellites with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).
Through this visit, the Department of Forest and Environmental Systems has expanded the role of Kookmin University in NASA's Southeast Asia Research Initiative (SARI) and has been able to increase students' understanding of entering international organizations in the environmental field.
Professor Lim said, “Satellites play an important role in responding to climate change, such as monitoring climate disasters and managing carbon sinks, so we will strengthen our cooperation with NASA research teams in the future and actively expand our environmental cooperation projects using global funds.”
Starting this year, the Kookmin University Center for Training Professionals in Integrated Landslide Management, designated by the Korea Forest Service, plans to continue to promote the Global Insight Program to strengthen the global capabilities of participating graduate students.
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