Skip to main content

Accra, the capital of Ghana, is one of the fastest-growing urban centres in West Africa. Located along the Gulf of Guinea, it serves as the country’s economic and administrative heart, home to more than 5 million people in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area (GAMA). The city is a major hub for manufacturing, finance, marketing, insurance, and logistics – but the pace of urbanisation is intensifying pressure on infrastructure, housing, and the coastal environment.

This image, captured on 22 February 2025 by one of the Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellites, shows the scale of Accra’s urban spread and its proximity to vulnerable coastal areas. The Sentinel-2 mission provides high-resolution optical imagery across 13 spectral bands, with applications that range from land use and vegetation monitoring to coastal erosion tracking and disaster risk management.

Satellite Image: Accra, Ghana
Accra, Ghana. Credit: European Union, Copernicus Sentinel-2 imagery

In rapidly growing cities like Accra, satellite data are a crucial planning tool. Sentinel-2’s high-resolution imagery allows analysts to distinguish between built-up areas, vegetation, and water bodies – vital for understanding patterns of expansion and land use. In flood-prone neighbourhoods such as those near the Odaw River, unregulated construction and blocked drainage channels have contributed to recurrent flooding during the rainy season. Frequent Earth observation helps authorities monitor changes in land cover, identify high-risk zones, and plan interventions accordingly.

Sentinel-2 data also support analysis of vegetation loss and green space distribution. As Accra expands, the health of remaining green corridors and wetlands is increasingly important for stormwater regulation, biodiversity, and urban cooling. The satellite’s red-edge bands are especially useful for monitoring these ecosystems through vegetation indices such as NDVI.

The Copernicus programme – the European Union’s Earth observation initiative operated in partnership with the European Space Agency – provides this data freely to governments, scientists, and planners. Its imagery plays a growing role in supporting sustainable development efforts and climate adaptation strategies in cities across Africa.

Featured image credit: European Union, Copernicus Sentinel-2 imagery

Satellite Images: Rhine River in Cologne, Germany
Image of the day: Rhine River shrinks as drought grips western GermanyNews

Image of the day: Rhine River shrinks as drought grips western Germany

Germany is experiencing an unusually dry start to the year, with March 2025 becoming the driest March ever recorded in the country. The effects are…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskApril 22, 2025 Full article
Satellite Image: Georgetown, Guyana
Image of the day: Georgetown on Guyana’s flood-prone Atlantic coastNews

Image of the day: Georgetown on Guyana’s flood-prone Atlantic coast

Georgetown, capital of Guyana, sits on South America’s northern coast, where the Demerara River meets the Atlantic Ocean. Once a Dutch settlement and later the…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskJune 19, 2025 Full article
Satellite image of Pio XI glacier, Chile
Image of the day: Pio XI glacier defies global retreat trendsNews

Image of the day: Pio XI glacier defies global retreat trends

The Pio XI glacier, nestled in Chile’s Southern Ice Field, holds the distinction of being South America’s largest glacier and a rare anomaly in the…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskJanuary 16, 2025 Full article