The structure of forests, in terms of mass and the three-dimensional arrangement of individual trees, is a direct indicator of how much carbon is stored in the ecosystem, which in turn, has a profound effect on how the ecosystem functions and cycles carbon, water, and nutrients (Shugart et al., 2015). There is an increased need to understand local to global storage and dynamics of carbon in terrestrial vegetation, as carbon storage is a prerequisite to understanding the coupling of the biosphere to other components of Earth systems including the climate. The BIOMASS mission of the European Space Agency (ESA), to be launched in 2021-2022 will provide, for the first time, synthetic aperture radar measurements at P-band frequency (~70 cm wavelength) and tomographical (TomoSAR) imaging capability to quantify forest structure and above ground biomass.