January 23, 2018
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Rescue Drone Saved Two Teen Swimmers on Its First Day of Deployment

Lifeguards used drone technology to rescue a pair of swimmers from dangerous surf off the coast of Australia. The rescue took less than 70 seconds compared to the six dangerous minutes it may have taken a human lifeguard to reach the swimmers.

by Patrick Caughill


RESCUE FROM ABOVE

On its very first day in operation, a new rescue drone helped lifeguards save two teenage swimmers stranded about 700 meters (2,300 feet) offshore of Lennox Head, New South Wales.

The company Little Ripper Life Saver developed the rescue drone, and the lifeguards had just started training with it Thursday morning when a member of the public alerted them that two teens were struggling in a swell of around three meters (9.8 feet).

Ballina lifeguard supervisor Jai Sheridan piloted the drone to the swimmers and released a flotation device, which inflated once it reached the water. The swimmers, ages 15 and 17, were then able to cling to the device as they swam back to shore.

“I was able to launch it, fly it to the location, and drop the pod all in about one to two minutes,” Sheridan told the Sydney Morning Herald.

A government official confirmed that the entire rescue took just 70 seconds, while a human lifeguard would have needed an average of six minutes to reach the swimmers.

“This is a world-first rescue,” Australian Deputy Premier John Barilaro told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. “Never before has a drone fitted with a floatation device been used to rescue swimmers like this.”

DAREDEVIL BOTS

Not only did the Little Ripper drone help get the two swimmers out of danger, it also eliminated the need to put a human lifeguard in harm’s way. It’s also far from the only machine being built to help keep people safe.

Researchers from the University of Technology Sydney School of Software have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) that, when paired with a Little Ripper Life Saver drone, can help identify and warn swimmers and surfers of nearby sharks.

Beaches aren’t the only areas targeted by rescue drone developers, though — the devices are also taking to the skies to help with emergencies on land. Swedish startup Flypulse has developed a drone that can deliver life-saving equipment to the site of an emergency four times faster than it typically takes an ambulance to arrive on the scene.

Drones are expanding the capabilities of rescue teams in a variety of ways, while also keeping first responders safe. As their use becomes more common, they have the potential to dramatically cut down the number of lives lost to natural disastersfailed rescue missions, and ocean hazards.


Originally appeared in Futurism.com | Photo Credit: JTT Technology

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