Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Drones Tested To Help Fight Blazes In Difficult B.C. Wildfire Season

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Nov, 2015 11:25 AM
    VANCOUVER — Drones flying above wildfires in British Columbia last summer hampered aerial efforts to control the blazes. But around the same time, the province was also using the unmanned aerial vehicles to determine if drones could be used to help fight wildfires.
     
    The B.C. Wildfire Service contracted two commercial drone companies in July and August to soar above the Boulder Creek and Elaho fires near Pemberton and the Rock Creek fire just north of the Canada-U.S. border.
     
    "It was very much kind of a small-scale trial to see how they could integrate, what kind of products they could generate for us," explained chief fire information officer Kevin Skrepnek.
     
    The drones flew in areas where flames had already been doused, mapping fires and using thermal imaging to look for hotspots that could flare again.
     
    Typically, finding hotspots is done with helicopters using a thermal scanning device or people searching the forest floor on their hands and knees, Skrepnek said.
     
    Robert Atwood, co-founder of Hummingbird Drones in Kamloops, B.C., said his experience fighting wildfires during summer breaks from university helped tailor services specifically to support fire suppression efforts.
     
    "What we're trying to accomplish is making the process of putting (fires) out more efficient," he explained. 
     
    Three of the company's machines were used in the test, each equipped with infrared scanning technology. They flew mostly at night, at times soaring almost 500 metres in the air.
     
    The team would then compile the data and get it to fire crews by the next morning to help them focus fire-fighting efforts.
     
    In order to fly over the blazes, Atwood and his team needed to get a special flight-operation certificate from Transportation Canada that allowed them into the restricted airspace.
     
    Not having the proper training and permits can cause big problems, Atwood said.
     
    "When you have people who take what is essentially a tool and fly it without regard for human life and property, it can not only be damaging to those trying to fight the wildfire, but incredibly damaging to a program that's trying to take on new technology as well."
     
    An unauthorized drone flying near the Testalindin Creek fire near Oliver, B.C., in August grounded eight helicopters and five planes for more than three hours.
     
    It was the most serious incident involving drones around wildfires this summer, but it wasn't the only time the machines threatened firefighting efforts.
     
    "Obviously, that's a pretty big safety concern to us. If it were to come into contact with our aircraft, that could have potentially dangerous results," Skrepnek said.
     
    It's unclear what the unauthorized drones were doing in the restricted airspace and no one was ever caught.
     
    During the test project, the drones were communicating and co-ordinating with fire crews, Skrepnek said.
     
    "It is two very different issues involving the same type of aircraft. But it is, I think, just an opportunity to remind people again that unsanctioned use in and around fires is illegal," Skrepnek said.
     
    No decision has been made on whether drones will become a regular part of the province's firefighting arsenal, but Skrepnek said the experience was positive.
     
    Other firefighting forces are testing drones, too, Skrepnek said, including Alaska and the U.S. forest services.
     
    Cost of the trial hasn't been tallied.
     
    "But certainly, if you do look at using this product compared to the hourly cost of flying a helicopter, it would certainly be a fraction of the cost," Skrepnek said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crown Wants 20 Years For B.C. Man, Reza Moazami, Convicted Of Luring Teenage Girls Into Prostitution

    Crown Wants 20 Years For B.C. Man, Reza Moazami, Convicted Of Luring Teenage Girls Into Prostitution
    The convictions included sexual assault, sexual exploitation and living off the avails of prostitution

    Crown Wants 20 Years For B.C. Man, Reza Moazami, Convicted Of Luring Teenage Girls Into Prostitution

    Charges Laid In Arsons, Shootings Targeting B.C. Justice Institute

    Charges Laid In Arsons, Shootings Targeting B.C. Justice Institute
    Two men have been arrested and charged for attacks on more than a dozen people linked, sometimes in the most tenuous way, to the institute that trains British Columbia's police officers

    Charges Laid In Arsons, Shootings Targeting B.C. Justice Institute

    Jarrod Sidhu Joins Vancouver Police, To Work With Father Police Sergeant Tej Sidhu

    Jarrod Sidhu Joins Vancouver Police, To Work With Father Police Sergeant Tej Sidhu
    Jarrod Sidhu is one of the 13 new recruits who joined the department on Thursday and is posted under his father, Tej Sidhu, who is a sergeant with the Vancouver police department

    Jarrod Sidhu Joins Vancouver Police, To Work With Father Police Sergeant Tej Sidhu

    Toronto Police Hunt For Indian-Origin Uber Cab Driver Amritpal Singh For Molesting Woman

    Toronto Police Hunt For Indian-Origin Uber Cab Driver Amritpal Singh For Molesting Woman
    Listed as Amritpal with the cab service company, he is described as a young man between 26 and 30 years of age, short black spiked hair and a short chin-strap beard

    Toronto Police Hunt For Indian-Origin Uber Cab Driver Amritpal Singh For Molesting Woman

    Apple Security Breach Could Impact Canadians With iPhones And iPads

    Apple Security Breach Could Impact Canadians With iPhones And iPads
    Apple Inc. has removed some applications from its app store after developers in China were tricked into using software tools that added malicious code to their work.

    Apple Security Breach Could Impact Canadians With iPhones And iPads

    Hundreds Stranded, Others Without Power As Slides Hit Northeast Of Pemberton

    Hundreds Stranded, Others Without Power As Slides Hit Northeast Of Pemberton
    Officials with the Squamish-Lillooet Regional District hope to gain a better idea today of how long it will take to repair roads and reach people stranded northeast of Pemberton

    Hundreds Stranded, Others Without Power As Slides Hit Northeast Of Pemberton