Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Climate-resilient infra via sat, AI

- BY GABRIELA BARON

We’re looking to affect more nations, assist more nations, in the region, as well as in other regions. So that’s there’s quite a bit. We’ve done work in Colombia, we’ve done work in Ghana, all over Africa

For two decades now, AnyWay has been providing climate-resilient solutions to the global transport infrastruc­ture industry.

“With AnyWay, we’ve affected a lot of nations. There’s a lot of work that we’ve done in Africa. We’ve helped a lot of the developing nations there. In the region of the Asia Pacific, we’re focused very heavily in Papua New Guinea,” Herbert Marquez Betz III, Philippine Country Representa­tive of AnyWay Solid Environmen­tal Solutions, said in the DAILY TRIBUNE’s online program Straight Talk.

“So we’re looking to affect more nations, assist more nations, in the region, as well as in other regions. So that’s there’s quite a bit. We’ve done work in Colombia, we’ve done work in Ghana, all over Africa,” Betz added.

In the Philippine­s, meanwhile, Betz said AnyWay helped in creating infrastruc­tures in the Philippine­s.

“I think we’ve helped with some Balikatan Exercise structures with the Philippine military and some military exploratio­ns,” he said.

“We’ve also helped with certain middle-class, mid-range, residentia­l complexes in Iloilo. With the roadworks, or road networks within those residentia­l communitie­s and then we also helped NGOs in the Philippine­s, (non-government organizati­ons),” he added.

Betz said AnyWay Solutions also implemente­d road works in Palo, Leyte for a relocation site of

the “Yolanda” victims.

“We worked closely with helping them with the relocation of those ‘Yolanda’ victims,” he added.

Currently, Betz said they are meeting with the Climate Change Commission, the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, and the National Irrigation Administra­tion to showcase their expanded services outside of techniques stabilizat­ion works as it ventures into the artificial intelligen­ce.

Tech to be ubiquitous

Betz said that artificial intelligen­ce, or AI, is becoming more prevalent and cheaper in the market.

“[We use AI] to be able to crunch data in a way that is more efficient and much faster than human capability,” Betz said.

“AI right now is very prevalent around the markets and it’s becoming cheaper and when you match AI with satellite technology, it allows us to design, it allows us to identify optimal route alignment, water encatchmen­t areas so that we can avoid, identify what areas situationa­l problems are so that we can incorporat­e that to the design and that we can share that with the either agency or the proponent,” he added.

Betz said they assure that the technology that they use helps government­s plan and provide preliminar­y specific to what is required to spend.

“If we look at satellite technology, say for 100 kilometers stretch of the road, if that were to be done convention­ally, as opposed to the satellite, let’s just say convention­ally would take more than a month to be able to collate and create that data,” he said.

“Whereas, if we use satellite technology, we could more or less in simplistic terms come up with a design within a week for a proponent,” he continued.

With AI, he noted, it can create a generalize­d cut and fill where it can be very specific.

“AI is using all of its ability to identify all optimal direction and the shortest direction and the shortest point from A to B,” he added.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY JAKE BAYAWA FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE ?? ARTIFICIAL intelligen­ce is making developmen­t projects more efficient and faster, according to Herbert Marquez Betz III, Philippine country representa­tive of AnyWay Solid Environmen­tal Solutions.
PHOTOGRAPH BY JAKE BAYAWA FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE ARTIFICIAL intelligen­ce is making developmen­t projects more efficient and faster, according to Herbert Marquez Betz III, Philippine country representa­tive of AnyWay Solid Environmen­tal Solutions.

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