The Center in Barcelona will centralize and process data gathered from ground stations as well as satellites, in addition to being a focal point for the data generated by predictive numeric models. Once processed, this data will permit researchers to make more precise and long-term forecasts about the atmospheric content of dust and sand.
The work carried out in the Barcelona Center will permit an improved evaluation of European air quality levels. That said, this information is especially important for the African countries of the Sahara and the Sahel regions, where dust and sandstorms represent a serious health problem as well as a major impediment in the development of some economic sectors. From this standpoint, the Center will collaborate with various programs of the World Health Organization and in particular MERIT, a project aimed at reducing the harm caused by meningitis in sub-Saharan Africa each year.
With the signing of this accord, Barcelona becomes one of the two headquarters–the other is Beijing, where another such forecasting center is already operating–of the project developed by the World Meteorological Organization to continually monitor and predict the amount of sand and dust in the atmosphere.
