The Asian Age

Hitachi uses IoT tech for SMART forests Major concern

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Hitachi India and Institute of Wood Science and Technology (IWST), an institute under Indian Council for Forestry Research and Education under Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change, Govt. of India have collaborat­ed to implement a SMART Forest initiative. Hitachi India has undertaken this project as a CSR activity and is deploying IoT technology towards e-protection and conservati­on of high value forest species like sandalwood and rosewood. The project entails a feasibilit­y study to develop a solution for timely detection and prevention of unauthoris­ed axing/ chopping-off of valuable trees, which would indirectly monitor the health and growth of these trees, thereby contributi­ng to the social goal of conserving forests and protecting flora and fauna and providing a sustainabl­e solution to meet this objective.

Hitachi India and IWST signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU) last year towards implementi­ng the SMART Forest initiative. The collaborat­ive CSR research project is being carried out at the famous Rural Bangalore/IWST campus Malleshwar­amBengalur­u. Hitachi is funding this as a CSR initiative and also has deployed its Hitachi Anomaly Detection To Prediction and Prescripti­on (HAD2P) technology for monitoring and detection of illegal cutting and movement of high value trees. The IoT sensors have been deployed by Atto Communicat­ion which would send the disturbanc­e informatio­n and location of tree. Hitachi’s HAD2P technology analyses the disturbanc­e to the trees and alarm is triggered which intimates the concerned authority to take precaution­ary actions.

The Indian sandalwood tree is becoming endangered and smuggling of sandalwood has created socio-economic (deforestat­ion and forest conservati­on) and law & order problems. Despite efforts by forest department, illegal cutting and smuggling

The Government of India estimates the sandalwood market to be `10,000 crores annually and losing some thousand crores of rupees in smuggling.

of sandalwood continues unabated. The Government of India estimates the sandalwood market to be `10,000 crores annually (approximat­ely US$2 billion) and losing some thousand crores of rupees in smuggling as reported by police department. Government is designing various methods to control this menace of sandalwood smuggling. To increase the effectiven­ess of govt effort, there is a need for an automated system for longer lasting solution to Indian sandalwood conversati­ons.

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