AFP – Inside a green orb planted in the German countryside is a high-tech aid to prevent wildfires that have grown more common and destructive with rising global temperatures.
The installation, resembling a giant golf ball covered in solar panels, is the hangar for an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered drone that its developer hopes one day will be able to sniff out and extinguish new blazes in minutes.
“Fires are spreading much faster and more aggressively than in the past. That also means we have to react more quickly,” Chief Executive Officer of the German firm Dryad Carsten Brinkschulte told AFP at a demonstration of the technology outside Berlin.
Once a rarity, the German capital has to get used to more wildfires. Flames ripped through a forest on the city’s western edge in the midst of a 2022 heatwave that saw several wildfires spring up in Germany.
The sort of tinderbox conditions which promote blazes – where heat, drought and strong winds dry out the landscape – have increased with climate change.
Wildfires have reached the point where they were “basically unstoppable”, said senior wildfire management expert Lindon Pronto at the European Forest Institute.
That is why action is needed to develop tools to “address fire in the prevention phase, during the operational phase, and also post-fire”, said Pronto.
Dryad is in the running with 29 other teams from around the globe for a multi-million-dollar prize to develop the ability to autonomously put out fires within 10 minutes.
During Dryad’s demonstration last week – the first for a computer-steered wildfire detection drone according to the company – chemicals in smoke from burning wood were picked up by sensors distributed in the forest.
The signal was relayed back to the company’s platform which released the drone from the orb. The unit rose above the trees, charting a zig-zag course to track down the precise location and extent of the fire. Firefighters using the information collected by the drone would be able “to respond much more efficiently and quickly and prevent a disaster”, Brinkschulte said.
Dryad eventually hopes to have the drone descend below the canopy and put out the fire using a novel technology: a “sonic cannon” blasting low-frequency sound waves at the right pressure to suppress small fires. An experimental acoustic suppression method, if it can be realised, would save the drone from carrying “large amounts of heavy water”, making the unit more nimble and effective, according to Brinkschulte.
Technologies like Dryad’s are a step towards putting out fires “without putting people’s lives in danger”, said a native Californian Pronto, where recent wildfires have had a devastating impact.
Huge blazes in Los Angeles in January killed 29 people, razed more than 10,000 homes and caused some USD250 billion (EUR231 billion) in damage, according to estimates by the private meteorological firm AccuWeather.
The greatest benefits of an autonomous fire prevention system would be in areas where “civilisation meets nature”, Brinkschulte said.
Such crossover zones are the most vulnerable to man-made wildfires and “where the risk to life and limb is naturally highest”.
The company hopes to bring the drone to market in 2026, with the first deployment likely to be outside Europe.
“These systems still need to have the regulatory framework to be able to operate commercially,” Brinkschulte said, adding that Dryad was aiming for deployment in Europe in the “coming years”.
A couple of kinks need to be worked out before then, however. The first attempt to respond to the dummy fire on Thursday was held up by a faulty GPS signal.
Related News
20 Mar, 2025
Molly Caudery fired up to defend World I . . .
29 Mar, 2025
WATCH: Rohit Sharma, Tilak Varma, and Su . . .
15 Mar, 2025
Disturbing new theory of what REALLY kil . . .
19 Feb, 2025
Paul McGinley warns that LIV rebels left . . .
31 Mar, 2025
Fight Over Ending Ramadan Sparks Fury in . . .
13 Feb, 2025
Auction of franchises in The Hundred end . . .
12 Mar, 2025
Sports News | Ponting Feels 2023 WC Fina . . .
17 Mar, 2025
What's the future of baseball in Japan a . . .