Krishna Karra's profile photo

Krishna Karra

New York

Remote Sensing Journalist at Bloomberg News

🌎 remote sensing, satellite imagery, visual journalism @BBGVisualData 🌎 adjunct professor @cooperunion

Articles

  • 1 month ago | ba.bloombergadria.com | Rachel Lavin |Krishna Karra

    Politika 10. mart 2025, 14:00 Palestinci se vraćaju na sjever Gaze otkako je u januaru proglašeno primirje između Izraela i Hamasa, pokušavajući da spase ono što je preostalo od njihovih domova nakon više od 15 mjeseci borbi. Uprkos uništenju, gotovo 140.000 zgrada još uvijek stoji širom ugrožene teritorije - ili oko 40 posto ukupnog broja - prema analizi radarskih slika istraživača s Državnog univerziteta u Oregonu.

  • 1 month ago | rs.bloombergadria.com | Rachel Lavin |Krishna Karra

    Politika 10. mart 2025, 08:30 Palestinci se vraćaju na sever Gaze, otkako je u januaru proglašeno primirje između Izraela i Hamasa, pokušavajući da spasu ono što je preostalo od njihovih domova nakon više od 15 meseci borbi. Uprkos uništenju, gotovo 140.000 zgrada još uvek stoji širom ugrožene teritorije - ili oko 40 odsto ukupnog broja - prema analizi radarskih slika istraživača sa Državnog univerziteta u Oregonu.

  • Sep 25, 2024 | bloomberg.com | Peter Millard |Dado Galdieri |Raeedah Wahid |Krishna Karra

    An underfunded agency is up against the agriculture industry’s unstoppable expansion — and humanity’s heritage hangs in the balance. Read the Portuguese version here. In the badlands of the southwestern Amazon, Antonia Barbosa is fighting to protect ancient archaeological finds from Brazil’s unstoppable $523 billion agribusiness industry. There, farmers view the land as a cash cow and the area’s historic geometric earth carvings, known as geoglyphs, are in the way.

  • Aug 9, 2024 | news.bloomberglaw.com | Eric Roston |Krishna Karra |Leslie Kaufman |Sinduja Rangarajan

    For the full experience visit: The Risky Business of Predicting Where Climate Disaster Will HitHumans have tried to predict the weather for as long as there have been floods and droughts. But in recent years, climate science, advanced computing and satellite imagery have supercharged their ability to do so. Computer models can now gauge the likelihood of fire, flooding or other perils at the scale of a single building lot and looking decades into the future.

  • Aug 9, 2024 | bloomberg.com | Eric Roston |Krishna Karra |Leslie Kaufman |Sinduja Rangarajan

    UNCOVERED Climate tech companies can tell you the odds that a flood or wildfire will ravage your home. But what if their odds are all different? By Eric Roston Krishna Karra Leslie Kaufman Sinduja Rangarajan August 9, 2024 Humans have tried to predict the weather for as long as there have been floods and droughts. But in recent years, climate science, advanced computing and satellite imagery have supercharged their ability to do so.

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Krishna Karra
Krishna Karra @k3blu3
23 Dec 24

RT @DeniseDSLu: ❄️🎄❄️🎄❄️🎄❄️🎄❄️🎄❄️🎄❄️🎄❄️🎄 when's the last time communities across the US have seen a white Christmas? for some folks, it's b…

Krishna Karra
Krishna Karra @k3blu3
16 Dec 24

RT @MaxLenormand: Satellite Images & Data Science are more common than ever in journalism news stories today I sat down with @k3blu3 from…

Krishna Karra
Krishna Karra @k3blu3
20 Nov 24

we built a custom model to identify ships engaging in illicit ship-to-ship transfers of oil from optical and radar satellite imagery. read this story by @ClaraDFMarques @helloimserene @soonweilun and @YasufumiSaito. 🎁: https://t.co/R7H1C1PhVW https://t.co/290lV2SKb5