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Resolute adds drones to its seeding and forest mapping techniques

With this equipment, the company reduces its carbon footprint, accelerates post-harvest forest regeneration and achieves greater efficiency

With the addition of more modern drones to Resolute’s forest operations in Ontario, Canada, the company will be able to further help reduce its carbon footprint and achieve faster post-harvest forest regeneration.

Those are just some of the strengths remote piloting systems, or drones, are bringing to work that is traditionally undertaken by planes and helicopters. “Both of which have a large carbon footprint, and both are expensive,” says Tom Ratz, Resolute’s planning manager in Ontario.

The equipment is not new to forestry, or to Ratz, whose team of foresters has been using it for several years to carry out quick aerial inspections or fly them further afield to decide if they need to walk into an area with no road access, for example.

The newest models in the arsenal are bigger, faster, and more sophisticated than any of the dozens of other drones the team currently uses. In fact, due to their size, weight and speed, these drones are operated by a specially trained and licensed pilot, whose work includes mapping flight plans and processing the images captured by the drone’s cameras.

The seeding drone, a Hylio AG-166, is a heavy-duty multicopter. Built in Texas, USA, and designed as an aerial sprayer, the drone had the spray arms removed and fitted with a seed spreader. Loaded with the seeds, the drone’s sprayer arms were removed and fitted with a seed spreader. Loaded with jack pine seeds, the drone flies like a helicopter and can get to work right after an area has been harvested, allowing seeds to germinate along with other species.

This fall the Hylio drone is finishing a few more weeks of production testing to gather enough information so that it can be used to seed this spring. While relatively new in Ontario reforestation, seeding drones have been used with success in Canada and the U.S. in areas affected by wildfires.

CURRENT HIGH-RESOLUTION IMAGES OF THE FOREST

Before seeding can begin, the team needs an accurate, detailed, and current picture of the area. Enter the WingtraOne, a drone that flies like a plane (at 35 mph – 57 kilometers per hour – it is eight times faster than a multicopter), in addition to being able to take off and land vertically.

The Swiss-built WingtraOne was purchased from Thunder Bay-based Four Rivers Group – the first Indigenous Wingtra dealer. Both drone purchases benefited from partial funding from CRIBE (Centre for Research & Innovation in Bio-Economy), in part for how drones help reduce carbon emissions and because this initiative brings innovative technology to the forest products industry.

Equipped with a high-resolution camera and a four-foot (125 cm) wingspan, WingtraOne can fly in a series of parallel tracks that are then stitched together to form a detailed photograph.

“You can literally count the logs in this image,” Ratz explains of a cut block displayed on his monitor. “I can tell what’s pine, what’s birch. I can see if there are any missed pieces.”

Satellite images are often used for this purpose, but you would not get the resolution these provide, says Ratz. And while planes provide higher resolution images, the cost of using one has increased by 20% in the last year.

Beyond depletion mapping, the drones are also used to help pulp and paper mills inventory their wood chip stores. Ratz also hopes to combine the drone’s high-res image capture technology with specialized software that could recognize and count tree species so that Resolute can continually update its forest inventory information.

FINDING HOT SPOTS WITH THERMAL IMAGING

The WingtraOne’s high-end compact Sony camera can be switched for a thermal imaging camera that can check pulp mill wood chip stores for hot spots. As piles of chips and biomasss compress, they can generate enough heat to lead to combustion, making the drone an important part of a mill’s safety system.

The thermal camera can also check on areas where a controlled burn was used to reduce debris at roadside. The drone can easily recheck the same area to make sure there is no lasting fire.

Each new application seems to generate new ideas on how to use these new tools.

Source
The Resolute Blog
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