The Commercial Appeal

Drones to be used for quake response

Official: Use in disasters could be ‘invaluable’

- TOM CHARLIER

Amid the confusion and pandemoniu­m that would follow a major earthquake, Memphis-area emergency response officials plan to deploy drones to check for collapsed buildings and bridges, locate fires and guide rescue crews.

Toward that end, the Central United States Earthquake Consortium, a Memphis-based agency charged with helping prepare an eight-state region for temblors on the New Madrid Seismic Zone, has begun developing a network of licensed drone pilots to aid in quake response efforts. Today, CUSEC will convene an initial meeting of prospectiv­e participan­ts.

“We’re going to use their insights into determinin­g how to build this (network),” said Jim Wilkinson, executive director of CUSEC.

The use of drones following disasters is not new. For instance, when a sinkhole opened beneath the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Kentucky, three years ago, drones descended into the cavern to relay images of the vehicles that fell into it.

In the aftermath of an earthquake, the remote-controlled vehicles would be especially useful, officials say, because informatio­n would be limited by disruption­s in communicat­ion systems.

“These are no-notice events. It takes time to figure out what occurred,” Wilkinson said. The possible applicatio­ns of drones “would be endless,” he added.

Christine Powell, a professor at the University of Memphis’ Center for Earthquake Research and Informatio­n, is working with CUSEC on the drone initiative. She said that amid the “chaos” following a major quake it would be difficult, without drones, to know which bridges and roads are impassable and where people might be trapped in damaged buildings or threatened by fires.

“The communicat­ions system will probably not be that great,” Powell said. “Usually, you’re down to satellite phones and ham radios.”

The video transmitte­d by drones could be “invaluable in saving lives,” she said.

The New Madrid zone is a zig-zagging network of faults that generally follow the Mississipp­i River from near Cairo, Illinois, into Eastern Arkansas. In late 1811 and early 1812, the zone produced a series of some of the most powerful quakes known to have struck east of the Rockies. Archaeolog­ical and geological evidence suggests the major temblors occur in the New Madrid every 500 or so years, although scientists aren’t sure what causes them.

Any drone network establishe­d to respond to quakes would have to adhere to new federal regulation­s. Last year, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion issued rules requiring licenses for commercial drone pilots, and the agency also prohibits commercial drone flights inside controlled air space without its approval.

Wesley Flint, a drone operator who is participat­ing in Thursday’s meeting, said officials would need to either negotiate a prior agreement with the FAA or have in place a system to obtain expedited approval for flights in controlled air space after a quake. When deployed, drones could transmit high-definition images of quake damage, said Flint, owner-operator of Precision Aerial Imaging in Olive Branch.

“As long as we have some communicat­ion, I could send them (emergencyr­esponders) live footage,” he said.

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