Yuma Sun

Residents in Greek suburbs put money toward early warning drones

- BY ELENA BECATOROS

ATHENS, Greece – The nightmare repeats itself every year: A towering wall of flames devours forests, farmland and homes, forcing animals and people to flee for their lives.

With their hot, dry summers, Greece and its southern European neighbors experience hundreds of devastatin­g wildfires each year. Last week alone, wildfires killed 21 people in Greece. The country’s deadliest, in 2018, cost more than 100 lives. And experts warn climate change is likely to exacerbate extreme weather, fueling more wildfires.

This summer, a group of residents in a leafy suburb of the Greek capital united in determinat­ion to prevent the nightmare from reaching their homes.

In less than a week in early August, an initial group of three people with a shared concern grew to an online community of about 320 offering donations to hire a company using longrange drones equipped with thermal imaging cameras as a sophistica­ted early warning system to catch wildfires before they can spread.

It’s a tried and tested system. Designed and set up with the help of Grigoris Konstantel­los, a commercial airline pilot and mayor of the southern Athens seaside suburbs of Vari, Voula and Vouliagmen­i, the drones began operating there last year.

“We didn’t discover it, we created it,” Kontantell­os said of the program. “We said, ‘Why shouldn’t this capability exist?’”

The system seemed the perfect solution for the concerned residents in the northern suburbs of Kifissia, Ekali and Nea Erithrea.

“We’re all worried, we’re all anxious,” said Melina Throuvala, a psychologi­st and one of the initial group of three. “We don’t want to mourn victims, or to see our environmen­t and our forests burning or our homes threatened. That was the main incentive.”

And with wildfires, prevention is key.

Operated by drone pilots with advanced training to fly beyond the visual line of sight and with permission from civil aviation authoritie­s, the drones provide live images and detect changes in temperatur­e, alerting their handlers in the critical early stages before a fire spreads. The drones run 24/7, with pilots working in six-hour shifts.

“The first few minutes are the most crucial for a fire,” said Giorgos Dertilis, who heads the local volunteer firefighti­ng unit. “At the start it’s easier to put out the fire. The more the minutes go by, the harder our job becomes.”

Volunteer units are integrated into Greece’s Civil Protection system, working closely with profession­al fire department­s. With no fire station in the wider Kifissia area, volunteers often can get to local blazes faster.

The drone company operates from the volunteer firefighte­rs’ headquarte­rs, so they can react immediatel­y at any signs of a fire.

The drone program’s value was quickly apparent. In the first couple of days, it picked up the start of a fire near a shuttered hotel, “so when we were on our way ... we knew, we were prepared to see a fire,” Dertilis said.

They quickly extinguish­ed the blaze. “It’s very important to know what to expect.”

The system’s innovation, said Emmanouil Angelakis, managing director of the company operating the drones, is that it includes specialize­d personnel, software, servers and satellite antenna so “drones, day and night, can scan all the forest areas with thermal cameras and sensors and give live images and coordinate­s of where a fire starts.”

The idea for the system came in June 2022, after a wind-whipped wildfire descended on Konstantel­los’ municipali­ty from a mountain ridge. As they coordinate­d the response, authoritie­s realized they had a problem.

“We were chasing the fire,” the mayor said. With the flames moving rapidly, keeping track of where water trucks were needed was a challenge. “We couldn’t see basic things on the ground. We’d see them with a delay, because we weren’t right in front of them.”

An extensive review of the emergency response followed. “We saw that what was missing is for us to not chase the fire, but to be able to have a live image of the fire, of where our assets are and where the threat is,” Konstantel­los said. They thought of drones.

The fire department already uses drones during an active blaze, covering a small area. What was needed was to see a fire when it starts, and stop it in its tracks.

Getting in touch with the drone company, the fire prevention program was born. In the year and a half it’s been operationa­l, it’s given early warnings for fires 12 times, Konstantel­los said.

“We’ve caught fires at 3:30 in the morning,” the mayor said. “When we sent the Civil Protection, they couldn’t even find the fire. We could see it on the drone.”

Then on Saturday, 270 lighting strikes sparked six blazes, starting at 5:30 a.m.. The drones saw them immediatel­y, Konstantel­los said Monday. With live drone images relayed to his cellphone, “we had amazing coordinati­on, and in less than 40 minutes we had put out six fires in hard-to-reach places.”

The drones have a range of 15 kilometers (nearly 10 miles) and are equipped with loudspeake­rs and searchligh­ts to warn off people doing banned outdoor work on high fire-risk days – or to frighten off potential arsonists. The municipali­ty is even running a pilot program to prevent drownings, whereby drones can drop lifejacket­s to swimmers in distress.

The municipali­ty pays 13,000-14,000 euros ($14,000

 ?? THANASSIS STAVRAKIS/AP ?? A LONG-RANGE DRONE equipped with thermal imaging cameras and a sophistica­ted early warning system patrols over Kavouri beach and nearby woodland, in southern Athens, Greece, on Aug. 17.
THANASSIS STAVRAKIS/AP A LONG-RANGE DRONE equipped with thermal imaging cameras and a sophistica­ted early warning system patrols over Kavouri beach and nearby woodland, in southern Athens, Greece, on Aug. 17.

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