South China Morning Post

Police set to launch search and rescue app for lost hikers

Hi-tech solution to aid in hunt for people missing in complex terrain will go live later this year

- Oscar Liu oscar.liu@scmp.com

Police are set to launch a new mobile app by the end of the year that incorporat­es features of the world’s first tailor-made search and rescue smart solution for hikers in distress.

Senior Superinten­dent Swalikh Mohammed of the force’s digital policing services bureau said the new “HKSOS” app, which will be connected to the 999 emergency hotline command and control centre, would allow users to enter their hiking details and set off unique SOS signals.

“Once a hiker hits the SOS button in the app or his emergency contact triggers a call for help to our officers through the app, we can promptly detect the hiker’s phone’s SOS signal over a long distance with our radars,” Mohammed said yesterday.

He was referring to Signal Radar, a patented search and rescue solution co-developed by the force and local company Altai Technologi­es, a firm based in Science Park.

The developmen­t of the world’s first search and rescue solution was covered under a memorandum of understand­ing signed with Science Park in September last year, Mohammed said.

Signal Radar’s technology can detect distress signals from the “HKSOS” app in complex terrain or areas without mobile network coverage.

The number of hiking-related rescue missions has surged in the past four years from fewer than 200 in 2019 to more than 1,000 in 2022, according to police.

Mohammed said the terrain often made rescue operations difficult, noting that Hong Kong had more than 60 islands and 40 per cent of its land area was designated as country parks.

“Many of the locations have mountainou­s terrain, which poses great challenges to rescuers, especially with more residents keen on adventurou­s outings during the pandemic,” he said.

The new solution could save time and resources as officers would no longer need to ask hikers’ family members many questions before launching a search, he said.

Underscori­ng the difficulti­es of search missions, a 33-year-old male hiker was rescued on Sunday morning following an 18-hour ordeal after he lost his footing near Skyline Path in Ma On Shan and fell down a 10-metre cliff.

The force said searches could be challengin­g with staff from various department­s taking from a few hours up to a week as remote hiking trails often had no mobile coverage.

The new solution would allow officers to locate missing hikers within minutes of arriving in an area from where the SOS signal was sent, Mohammed said.

Signal Rader devices come in four sizes and can be equipped on helicopter­s, drones and individual rescuers on search missions. They can detect signals emitted from the app from a far distance and alert rescue teams to the exact locations of missing hikers.

Mohammed said the force had tested the app 40 times over the past six months in the Sai Kung area with a success rate of more than 90 per cent, adding it would continue testing and calibratin­g before launching it.

The force added that the app – which won medals along with Signal Radar in the latest edition of the Internatio­nal Exhibition of Inventions, a prestigiou­s annual event held in Geneva – would also adopt artificial intelligen­ce to enhance its capability.

“RescueAI, which also won a medal in Geneva, can track where a missing person has hiked, his walking speed, terrain and geographic­al conditions. The AI can learn from all this informatio­n and automatica­lly predict where the hiker may have gone,” the senior superinten­dent said.

Science Park said the force was the first government body to sign a memorandum of understand­ing to drive tech adoption and nurture innovation and technology talent.

 ?? Photo: May Tse ?? Ken Leung of Altai Technologi­es, Superinten­dent Swalikh Mohammed and Eric Or of the Science Park introduce the app.
Photo: May Tse Ken Leung of Altai Technologi­es, Superinten­dent Swalikh Mohammed and Eric Or of the Science Park introduce the app.
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