Home News Insitu, FireWhat, Esri come together to fight wildfires using geospatial technologies

Insitu, FireWhat, Esri come together to fight wildfires using geospatial technologies

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ScanEagle on a launcher. ScanEagle UAS can fly the gaps โ€” both day and night โ€” using its military-grade electro-optical (EO) cameras during daylight, and infrared (IR) cameras for nighttime imaging.

Costa Mesa, California:ย Insitu, a leading information services company with more than one million operational unmanned aircraft systems flight hours announced its partnership with FireWhat, and Esri, the world leader in spatial analytics, in early August. Through this partnership, aerial reconnaissance for fighting wildfires will be provided by Insituโ€™s INEXA Solutions, comprised of INEXA Control, Insitu air vehicles including the ScanEagle, and payloads including the new High Accuracy Photogrammetry (HAP) payload. The INEXA Solutions professional aerial remote sensing services group will work with FireWhatโ€™s fire professionals, using its geographic information system (GIS) customized for firefighters, and hosted on Esriโ€™s ArcGIS platform.

Currently, fire incident commanders must work with fire line information that often is 12-to-24 hours old โ€” while a fire continues to burn. Now, Insituโ€™s ScanEagle UAS can โ€œfly the gapsโ€ โ€” both day and night โ€” using its military-grade electro-optical (EO) cameras during daylight, and infrared (IR) cameras for nighttime imaging. Flying at these times will provide previously unavailable data collection, analysis, and delivery of decision-making information to manned firefighting fleets operating in difficult terrain, smoke, or temperature inversion situations. The comprehensive spatial analytic capabilities of ArcGIS leverage FireWhatโ€™s unique ability to effectively fight wildfires using technology in an entirely new way.

Integrating Insituโ€™s proven aerial remote sensor imagery with FireWhatโ€™s gold-standard GIS will provide near-real time live, web-based video feed of thermal images to FireWhatโ€™s ground-based mobile command centers. The Infrared/thermal camera technology penetrates smoke or darkness, gathering and disseminating georeferenced still images of points of interest, and allows FireWhat’s data to quickly create geo-referenced high-resolution mosaics in Portable Document Format (PDF), and digital fire progression/suppression maps. Combining these exciting new technologies will dramatically increase strategic and tactical awareness and decision-making for firefighters and first responders.

Insitu, FireWhat, and Esriโ€™s efforts are supported by HP, Inc., (HP) hardware, including servers, laptops, and printers. This collective partnership represents expert knowledge and resources that now are combined to deliver a system surpassing any fire emergency and disaster tracking solution currently available in North America.
According to Sam Lanier, FireWhat Chief Executive Officer, โ€œFireWhat, HP, and Esri previously have enjoyed a strategic business relationship, and partnering with Insitu will allow all of us to continue developing advanced technologies that can be deployed globally to effectively and intelligently fight wildfires.โ€

โ€œThis is a revolutionary breakthrough in firefighting, as the typical 12-to-24 hours of critical information lag time during darkness or in smokey conditions is eliminated,โ€ said Jon Damush, Vice President and General Manager, Insitu Commercial. โ€œCombining INEXA Solutionsโ€™ integrated imagery with FireWhatโ€™s solution that incorporates Esriโ€™s ArcGIS creates a โ€˜best of breedโ€™ solution that will enable firefighters to quickly determine the best possible actions to take through GIS mapping.โ€

โ€œWe are pleased to be working with these great organizations on efforts that are so important for saving lives and protecting resources,โ€ said S.J. Camarata, Director, Esri Worldwide Global Business Development and Strategies. โ€œEmploying UAVs to provide real-time data to track, plan and predict how dangerous events like wildfires evolve is important to the future of emergency response.โ€