The Philippines will soon be sending its biggest Filipino-made satellite to space.

Called Mula, or Multispectral Unit for Land Assessment, the newest Earth-observation satellite can capture operational-quality images of approximately 100,000sq km of land area daily.

Mula weighs 130kg compared with microsatellites Diwata-1 and Diwata-2, which weighed around 50 kg.

Mula is being developed under the Advanced Satellite and Know-How Transfer for the Philippines (ASP) project of the Department of Science and Technology (DoST).

The project is being implemented by scientists and engineers of the University of the Philippines Diliman and the DoST-Advanced Science and Technology Institute (Asti), in coordination with the Philippine Space Agency (Philsa).

The Philsa will oversee its completion and launch in 2023, as well as the satellite’s management and operation.

Mula is being designed and manufactured together with British small satellite developer Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL), which won the 370 million peso ($7.7 million) contract in September.

In August 2019, the DoST-Asti signed an £11 million ($15.5 million) agreement with SSTL for the country’s share of data tasking and acquisition of its NovaSAR-1 satellite’s services.

Mula’s design is based on SSTL’s TrueColour earth-observation satellite, capable of capturing 5m resolution images with a swath width of 120km – an improvement from Diwata-2’s cameras, which have a 54m spatial resolution with a field of 90km.

Once launched, the satellite shall provide data on a regular basis for a wide variety of applications, including coastal mapping and monitoring; disaster damage assessment; agriculture and aquaculture monitoring; and forestry management, among others.

Mula’s payload also includes Automatic Identification System and Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast, which can be utilised for ship and aircraft detection and tracking.

“With its capability to capture higher-resolution images, we will be able to better monitor terrestrial ecosystems, as well as our land and marine resources to ensure both agricultural productivity and environmental integrity,” said Gay Jane Perez, deputy director of Philsa and ASP project leader.

According to engineer John Leur Labrador, Mula project manager, the new satellite can be described as having our own astronaut in space.

“We can think of this spacecraft as a Filipino astronaut tasked to take images of our natural resources while monitoring aircraft and ship activity in our country at the same time,” said Labrador, who also worked on Diwata-1 and Diwata-2.

After the launching in 2016 of the Diwata-1, the first Filipino-made satellite, into space, the country, through the DoST, has picked up the pace in space development. Since then it has launched another microsatellite (Diwata-2) and two cube satellites (Maya-1 and Maya-2).

PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER/ASIA NEWS NETWORK