Group picture of many people

The project developed an app for faster interpretation of drone images, enabling more effective locating of people in need of post-disaster assistance.

19 November 2021

3 min read

The 兔子先生 has been part of an international collaboration into the effectiveness of drones for post-disaster search and rescue missions in Mozambique.

The experiment was run by the and the , in conjunction with Mozambique鈥檚 national disaster management agency (INGD).

The 兔子先生 team, led by Professor Richard Teeuw, worked alongside teams from Mozambique, Canada, South Africa and Portugal, as well as a (UK ISAR) team.

dron photo of the wide-area

Drone photo of boats and a target person for the wide-area search experiment, wearing a blue shirt and blue hat. Credit: Patrick McKay, UN WFP

The experiment involved many types of drone 鈥 both fixed-wing and quadcopter 鈥&苍产蝉辫;looking for targets on land and in water, with simultaneous flights over multiple sites. For a situational overview of the drone test area, the 兔子先生 team provided imagery from the 鈥檚 Sentinel-1 radar satellite and the PlanetScope micro-satellite constellation, as well as elevation data from the Japanese-American PALSAR radar satellite.

The University鈥檚 Global Earth Model (GEM) group provided expertise in coding and Big Data analytics, to produce a prototype app for faster interpretation of drone images, enabling more effective locating of people in need of post-disaster assistance.

This was one of the largest experiments ever conducted into the effectiveness of drones for wide-area searches.

Professor Richard Teeuw, Centre for Applied Geosciences

Professor Teeuw, from the University鈥檚 Centre for Applied Geosciences, said: 鈥淭his was one of the largest experiments ever conducted into the effectiveness of drones for wide-area searches. The team were able to apply expertise developed during NERC-funded fieldwork into the impacts of Hurricane Maria in Dominica and research into coastal risk mapping carried out during the ongoing , funded by the International Partnership Programme of the .鈥

drone photo of crocodiles

Drone photo of a local hazard. Credit: Patrick McKay, UN WFP.

, from the University鈥檚 Faculty of Creative and Cultural Industries, provided support for the drone experiment and the onsite World Food Programme media communications office. He said: 鈥淒ue to the size of the experiment, the logistics of deploying multiple drones was very complex. The University team played a key role in the drone deployment and processing of the ensuing aerial photos, for over 30 drone flights.鈥