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Safecast sensor on a kayak
Overview

Safecast is an international, volunteer-driven non-profit organisation dedicated to producing open, accessible and granular environmental data, with a primary focus on radiation and air quality monitoring through participatory and open-source approaches.

    Country
    Japan
    Geolocation

    Safecast

    Contributor
    ISIG
    Summary Description

    Safecast designs and deploys open hardware and software tools that enable citizens and experts to collect, share and access high-quality environmental data. Originating from a post-disaster information gap, Safecast promotes transparency, public trust and evidence-based decision-making through open data and community-driven monitoring.

    Context & Background

    Safecast was established following the 2011 Fukushima earthquake and nuclear accident, in response to the lack of accurate, trustworthy and publicly available radiation information. Initially focused on radiation monitoring, the initiative later expanded to air quality monitoring, leveraging global volunteer engagement and open-source technologies.

    Problem Addressed

    Lack of publicly accessible, accurate and trusted environmental data during and after emergencies, limiting public awareness, expert analysis and policy decision-making in high-risk contexts.

    Vulnerable Groups

    Populations exposed to environmental and radiological risks, particularly those with limited access to official information or heightened sensitivity to pollution and radiation.

    Governance

    Safecast operates through a decentralised, volunteer-based governance model, supported by technical experts and global collaborators, emphasising transparency, openness and public participation.

    Emergency Preparedness

    Safecast enhances preparedness by enabling rapid data collection and dissemination during emergencies through pre-deployed tools and trained volunteer networks.

    Infrastructure Readiness

    Relies on distributed sensing infrastructure composed of mobile, fixed and solar-powered monitoring devices.

    Purpose of Engagement

    To empower citizens, experts and institutions with reliable environmental data and foster trust, transparency and shared situational awareness.

    Methods of Engagement
    • Citizen science and crowdsourced data collection
    • Open-source hardware and software tools
    • Mobile applications and online data platforms
    • Social and digital community engagement
    Degree of Influence & Decision-Making

    Participants contribute directly to data generation and dissemination, influencing public discourse, expert analysis and policy considerations through open data.

    Capacity-Building & Long-Term Empowerment

    Safecast builds long-term capacity through open-source tools, technical education, community participation and global knowledge sharing.

    Key Features & Innovations
    • Open-source environmental monitoring technologies
    • Citizen-led, high-resolution data collection
    • Open data published under Creative Commons
    • Global volunteer and expert collaboration
    Language(s)

    English

    Implementing Organisation(s)

    Safecast (international non-profit organisation)

    Experience of the Implementing Organisation in DRRM

    Extensive experience in post-disaster environmental monitoring, citizen science and risk communication, particularly in radiological contexts.

    Actors Involved
    • Volunteers and citizen scientists
    • Technical experts and researchers
    • Policy makers
    • General public
    Implementation Steps
    1. Development of open hardware and software tools
    2. Deployment of monitoring devices
    3. Crowdsourced data collection
    4. Open publication and visualisation of data
    Resources Required

    Combination of volunteer contributions, technical expertise and external partnerships.

    Timeframe & Phases

    Ongoing and iterative, with continuous deployment, monitoring and improvement.

    Lessons Learned from Implementation

    Open, participatory data collection increases trust, transparency and resilience in crisis contexts.

    Challenges & Adaptive Strategies

    Ensuring data quality, sustaining volunteer engagement and integrating citizen-generated data into institutional decision-making.

    Risk & Mitigation Plan

    Distributed monitoring and redundancy reduce single-point failures and improve resilience across hazard types.

    Sustainability Model

    Sustainability is ensured through open-source licensing, global volunteer engagement and public-domain data sharing.

    Scalability & Adaptability

    Highly scalable and adaptable across regions, hazards and environmental monitoring domains.

    Technology & Innovation

    Innovative use of mobile, GPS-enabled, solar-powered and low-cost sensors integrated with open data platforms.

    Financial & Logistical Sustainability - Direct Costs

    Moderate hardware production and deployment costs, reduced through open-source design.

    Financial & Logistical Sustainability - Operational Costs

    Low operational costs due to volunteer-driven data collection and decentralised infrastructure.

    Lessons Learned

    Citizen science and open data are powerful tools for strengthening transparency, preparedness and community resilience during environmental and technological crises.