Sensors and Systems
Breaking News
Clark launches world’s first, industry-approved professional geospatial leadership doctorate
Rating12345Clark University, through its School of Climate, Environment, and Society and School...
​​​GEO Business 2026 breaks attendance records with 6,200+ professionals
Rating12345Over 6,200 professionals headed to GEO Business 2026, cementing its position...
Trimble Opens Entries for the 2026 Construction Innovation Awards
Rating12345Award program recognizes organizations leveraging technology to drive innovation,...

November 3rd, 2025
ABB secures Canadian Space Agency contract to develop climate instrument

  • Rating12345

TICFIRE is a high-tech infrared imager that will support the scientific study of the upper atmosphere, advancing global climate monitoring capabilities.

ABB has been awarded a contract by the Canadian Space Agency to carry out the conceptual development (Phase A) of the Thin Ice Clouds and Far InfraRed Emissions (TICFIRE) instrument. TICFIRE is an integral component of the High-altitude Aerosols, Water Vapour and Clouds (HAWC) satellite mission – a Canadian-led initiative focused on advancing climate science and environmental monitoring. In addition, ABB will support further technology development activities to be defined over the course of the project. Through its role in the initiative, ABB is helping to refine global climate monitoring capabilities.

The HAWC mission aims to deliver essential data to enhance forecasting of severe and extreme weather events, improve climate modeling, support air quality assessments, and aid in tracking natu-ral disasters such as wildfires, volcanic eruptions and intense rainfall. The mission will enable in-formed decision-making across sectors vital to human wellbeing, including health, agriculture, water resources, and biodiversity.

The TICFIRE infrared spectral imager will be designed to observe the upper atmosphere and advance scientific understanding of aerosol-cloud interactions – one of the most significant sources of uncer-tainty in climate modeling. The novel space instrument will allow scientists to measure how cold wa-ter vapor and its ice cloud variant block the incoming sun energy and the energy of the Earth attempt-ing to escape into space – Earth’s main cooling mechanism. Such measurements can only be carried out by placing a sensor above the atmosphere and observing it in infrared colors – and approach that has not been possible with previous technologies.

ABB secures Canadian Space Agency contract to develop climate instrument | GeoConnexion