Artificial intelligence is emerging as a critical tool in the fight against wildfires, providing real-time monitoring, early detection, and enhanced safety for controlled burns. In a year marked by devastating losses, with over 16,000 homes and structures destroyed in the Los Angeles area alone, experts are turning to technology to alleviate natural disaster damages. The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Forest Service are increasingly allocating resources to beneficial and controlled fires to help reduce forest overgrowth and the risk of catastrophic wildfires.
San Francisco-based startup Pano AI and San Ramon’s Green Grid are among the companies leveraging artificial intelligence to monitor both uncontrolled wildfires and planned prescribed burns. Pano AI offers a system called Pano Station, which uses dual ultra-high-definition cameras mounted on elevated sites to monitor for smoke across vast landscapes every minute. Leveraging NVIDIA GPUs for inference, the system employs distinct models for day and nighttime monitoring, with human reviewers verifying potential detections. This technology has enabled fire departments to respond more swiftly than traditional 911 calls, facilitating faster containment and boosting community acceptance of controlled burns.
Green Grid’s artificial intelligence-powered camera systems have been deployed to help utility companies and resorts detect wildfire start zones promptly, allowing for preemptive containment measures before fires escalate beyond control. The integration of artificial intelligence in first responder operations has been further strengthened through public-private partnerships involving organizations like CAL FIRE, which collaborates with Alert California and UC San Diego. Their shared network of cameras utilizes artificial intelligence to identify new fire outbreaks, especially in remote areas where early human detection is challenging. The focus on early alerts and proactive containment, underpinned by artificial intelligence, is helping modernize wildfire management and response, reducing risks to both human lives and property.