Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Can Firefighting Drones Save Us From Catastrophe? System Could Have Slashed Damage From August Fires, CEO Claims
News
By News
Published 5 years ago on
December 1, 2020

Share

[aggregation-styles]

With flame-ravaged communities still mired in a tough recovery after California’s worst fire season, a Silicon Valley startup says its artificially intelligent firefighting drones could help stop future catastrophes.

If drones from Rain Industries had been in position around the Bay Area during this August’s lightning storms, the aircraft could have contained 72% of the fires within 10 minutes of ignition, the Palo Alto firm’s co-founder and CEO Maxwell Brodie said. “This is a transformative technology,” Brodie said. “If it is us or someone else that does this, it doesn’t really matter. This will happen.”

After starting out with a smaller, six-rotor prototype drone that successfully doused small fires by dropping balls full of retardant, Rain is now testing autonomous aircraft resembling small helicopters that it says can fly preemptively during potentially hazardous wildfire conditions and use their infrared sensors to locate and combat flames when they first erupt. Alternatively, the drones could take to the air as soon as flames are detected by the hundreds of fire-spotting cameras already positioned throughout California, existing lightning-strike-detection antennas or weather satellites.

“We are going after and solving the rapid response piece,” Brodie said.

Read More →

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

UP NEXT

Rise of the Anti-“Woke” Democrat

Rancho Cucamonga Prepares for First US Bullet Train Hub in 2028

1 hour ago

8 Ways Musk and Trump Could Inflict Pain on Each Other

1 hour ago

Fresno Downtown Parking Costs Taxpayers an Extra $4 Million

The Fresno City Council has spent long days this week discussing the city’s $2.4 billion budget. Hashing over the budget for at least ...

12 minutes ago

12 minutes ago

Fresno Downtown Parking Costs Taxpayers an Extra $4 Million

55 minutes ago

NASA and the Defense Department Rely on SpaceX in So Many Ways

1 hour ago

Whooping Cough Is Surging. Do You Need Another Shot?

1 hour ago

Rancho Cucamonga Prepares for First US Bullet Train Hub in 2028

1 hour ago

8 Ways Musk and Trump Could Inflict Pain on Each Other

2 hours ago

Fresno Unified Has Twice as Many Administrators, Lower Test Scores Than Its Peer District

3 hours ago

Sunday’s Life Jacket Giveaway Promotes Safety on Fresno Area Waters

3 hours ago

D-Day Veterans Return to Normandy to Mark 81st Anniversary of Landings

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend