SlideShare a Scribd company logo
2
Most read
10
Most read
Drone Presentation Edit
Provide an Overview of Drone Technology
Environmental Applications of Drone Technology
Other Considerations
Questions, Comments, Discussion
An aircraft with the capacity to fly
autonomously due to the support
of on board computers and
sensors.
The US military has poured
billions of dollars of research into
these high tech tools, and now
provide a low-cost option to the
commercial market.
(Source: Cielmap2012)
Drone Presentation Edit
Anyone Can Afford Them
High quality
drones now reach
down to a price of
as little as $1,000
Drones can now
be a part of nearly
any enterprise that
can use them.
MAV (Micro Air Vehicles): These aircraft are very small and operate at very low altitudes.
VTOL (Vertical Take-Off & Landing): These aircraft require no vertical takeoff or
landing
LASE (Low Altitude, Short-Endurance): Launched by hand or catapult.
LASE Close: Do require runways, larger size and weight confer increased capabilities.
LALE (Low Altitude, Long Endurance): These UAS may carry payloads at high
altitudes for extended periods.
MALE (Medium Altitude, Long Endurance): Operating at high altitudes (9000m) for
long extended distances.
HALE (High Altitude, Long Endurance): These are the largest of the UAS. These UAVs
may fly at high altitudes (20,000 m) for distances that extend thousands of km.
Eco-Drones
The technology while best known for gathering
military intelligence now can perform
environmental work at a fraction of the cost.
Drones used for these purposes are known as
eco-drones or conservation drones. Their
agility and low cost quality imaging make them
the ideal tool for environmental monitoring.
Environmental
Applications
 Forest health monitoring:
 Fire Mapping Applications
 Forest inventory: Coarse-scale
inventory
 Wildlife surveys: Terrestrial
flights for large-animal surveys
extended operations.
 Avalanche patrols:
 Air quality monitoring:
 Plume tracking: For monitoring
of water pollution
 Groundwater discharge
monitoring:
 Mine surveys: improve surveys
and operations in open-pit
mines.
 Precision agriculture:
Monitoring of crop health and
precision application of
chemicals.
Brazil has purchased 14 drones for US$350 million for the Sao
Paul Environmental Police to monitor deforestation in the Amazon,
track poachers and seek out illegal mining operations (Cohen,
The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has been using drones, to
monitor illicit trade in Africa by tracking poachers and the wildlife
they are pursuing in real time (WWF, 2012).
The use of drones for monitoring destructive activities such as
poaching and illegal logging have been notably applied in Africa,
Asia and South America.
Drones can be used to monitor highways vulnerable to
landslides, using high resolution cameras to detect cracks
that may indicate the onset of a landslide. Data collected from
the drone can be used by authorities to initiate early warning
allowing people to escape and those travelling to the area to
avoid the disaster event before it occurs (Hinkley and
Early Warning Applications
The use of drones for early warning of forest fires has been
tested by the US Forest Service. By collecting data on forest
fires, firefighters can better plan and manage fires. While
manned helicopters and planes could collect similar
information, the flight costs, and risks involved are high.
(Hinkley and Zajkowski, 2011)
Quick and easy deployment ability
Entering hazardous areas make drones a beneficial tool for
collecting real-time data, mapping disaster impacts as they
occur. Drones can provide real time information to
emergency planners, showing where environmental
conditions are worsening (i.e. flood spreading) and contribute
to rescue efforts. (Hinkley and Zajkowski, 2011).
 A developed system, using multispectral and electro-
optical infrared cameras is now being used by the Italian
Coast Guard for detecting illegal and unauthorized sewer
and storm-drain environmental policy violations.
(Watts, Ambrosia, Hinkley, E.A., 2012)
Infrared thermography is an ideal tool to
detect environmental contamination.
Bridge Inspections
Spatially Integrated Small-Format Aerial
Photography (SFAP) is being developed which is a
low-cost solution for bridge surface imaging and is
proposed as a remote bridge inspection technique. It
will Provide top-down views, drones flying at about
1000 feet can allow visualization of sub-inch (large)
cracks and joint openings on bridge decks or highway
pavements (Chen, S. E., Hauser, E. W., Boyle, C. G., &
Natarajan, M. 2013).
The University of Nebraska-Lincoln
and the University of California-
Berkeley were jointly awarded a
nearly $1 million grant from the US
Department of Agriculture for
developing drones that can take
water quality samples from lakes,
rivers and streams). The project is
still in the development stage, but
the helicopter-type drones can
already be deployed to collect small
volume water samples from remote(Abourezk, 2013)
 Many state and federal fish and wildlife agencies include a
law enforcement arm. Some proposed legislation is loosely-
written, and severely limits the use of drones by “law
enforcement agencies” (The Pew Research Center 2014).
 Politicians tend to follow public sentiment, thus increased
awareness of drones has resulted in numerous bills being
introduced in various state legislatures seeking to limit their
use. Between the 2013 and 2014 state legislative sessions,
over 40 states introduced bills addressing drones. Federal
regulations are already in place, with more under review (The
Pew Research Center 2014).
Americans were recently surveyed about drone use, and 63%
indicated that uninhibited personal and commercial drone use
would represent a change for the worse.
The ability of misuse and “mischief” with drones is real, and will
undoubtedly develop into a new field of law, regulation,
prohibited and permitted uses (The Pew Research Center 2014).
The uses of drones are as numerous as the types of technological sensing
and other uses that can be deployed on them. While concerns on human
privacy are legitimate, its use as a cost effective management tool are too
great to pass laws that would limit agencies from using them in
environmental management, and other beneficial uses for the public
good.
Kurt W. Smith
Professor of Environmental
Management
Methodist University
Fayetteville, NC
kusmith@methodist.edu

More Related Content

PPTX
Design and Operation of UAV
Sai Shubhankar
 
PPTX
Drones
Elaine E Lum
 
PPTX
drones future need
Rushikesh Dudhate
 
PDF
Wireless Communication with UAV
Muazzam ali
 
PPTX
Drone-Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
shivu1234
 
PPTX
Drone
SayanSarkar55
 
PPTX
Firefighting Drones: Drones in the Field
Dronefly
 
PDF
QUAD COPTERS FULL PPT
Girija Sankar Dash
 
Design and Operation of UAV
Sai Shubhankar
 
Drones
Elaine E Lum
 
drones future need
Rushikesh Dudhate
 
Wireless Communication with UAV
Muazzam ali
 
Drone-Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
shivu1234
 
Firefighting Drones: Drones in the Field
Dronefly
 
QUAD COPTERS FULL PPT
Girija Sankar Dash
 

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Drones
vsinha12
 
PPTX
3. Types and applications of drones
Devender Singh Bohra
 
PPTX
Drones
Best Drone Advisor
 
PPTX
Drone technology
Arzaool Hazard Gąndąprytė
 
PPTX
11. Future of Drones
Devender Singh Bohra
 
PPTX
Drones 101
Amos Tay
 
PPTX
Drones
RoBo karthi
 
PPTX
UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle)
UDIT PATEL
 
PDF
Drone ppt
ASHWIN A
 
PPTX
Drones (UAV)
Raj Rajeshwar Singh Rathore
 
PPTX
2. History of drones
Devender Singh Bohra
 
PPTX
Unmanned aerial vehicles
Shahnawaz Alam
 
PPTX
Drone- A killer & Deliverable
Shravan kumar
 
PPTX
Drones! what else
Muhammad Zeeshan Muzaffar
 
PPTX
Uav presentation
Meshut
 
PDF
Drones: Present & Future
Fresh Digital Group
 
PDF
Drone technology,UAV
Umesh Dadde
 
PPT
drone
akshay ghanwat
 
PPTX
unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)
UDIT PATEL
 
Drones
vsinha12
 
3. Types and applications of drones
Devender Singh Bohra
 
11. Future of Drones
Devender Singh Bohra
 
Drones 101
Amos Tay
 
Drones
RoBo karthi
 
UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle)
UDIT PATEL
 
Drone ppt
ASHWIN A
 
2. History of drones
Devender Singh Bohra
 
Unmanned aerial vehicles
Shahnawaz Alam
 
Drone- A killer & Deliverable
Shravan kumar
 
Drones! what else
Muhammad Zeeshan Muzaffar
 
Uav presentation
Meshut
 
Drones: Present & Future
Fresh Digital Group
 
Drone technology,UAV
Umesh Dadde
 
unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)
UDIT PATEL
 
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPSX
How drone technology is revolutionizing the marketplace
Tahoe Silicon Mountain
 
PPTX
Drone technology
Ehtasham Anwar
 
PDF
Mitie - Solving problems with drones
Will Credicott
 
PDF
Introduction privacy and drones130902.pptx (alleen lezen)
schermerbw
 
PPTX
Dhruv Drone Thesis FInal PPT
Dhruv Tandon
 
PPTX
Drone Technology
Asad Qayyum Babar
 
PPTX
Drones
Atharva Chavan
 
PDF
From Maps to Apps the Future of Drone Technology
Godfrey Nolan
 
PDF
Landmines
martindudziak
 
PDF
Apps, Maps and Drones: Technology for the Forest Landowner and Manager
Arkansas Forestry Association
 
PPTX
Доступ общественности к экологически значимой информации в Беларуси
cesbelarus
 
PDF
Africa 4 Tech 2016 : AgroTech Workshop Restitution
Stephan - Elo Gras
 
ODP
ujava.org Drone Physics
신동 강
 
PPTX
Science of flight
angelagig
 
PPTX
Seminar on u a-v
tarunnonmed
 
PPTX
Drones the future technology
vikram singh
 
PPTX
Drones and all about it seminar
Jayaram .P
 
PDF
Forestsurveying and engineering
iqbalforestry
 
PPT
Drones presentation
Amna Abrar
 
PPTX
Bennington future technologies
rjensenesu3
 
How drone technology is revolutionizing the marketplace
Tahoe Silicon Mountain
 
Drone technology
Ehtasham Anwar
 
Mitie - Solving problems with drones
Will Credicott
 
Introduction privacy and drones130902.pptx (alleen lezen)
schermerbw
 
Dhruv Drone Thesis FInal PPT
Dhruv Tandon
 
Drone Technology
Asad Qayyum Babar
 
From Maps to Apps the Future of Drone Technology
Godfrey Nolan
 
Landmines
martindudziak
 
Apps, Maps and Drones: Technology for the Forest Landowner and Manager
Arkansas Forestry Association
 
Доступ общественности к экологически значимой информации в Беларуси
cesbelarus
 
Africa 4 Tech 2016 : AgroTech Workshop Restitution
Stephan - Elo Gras
 
ujava.org Drone Physics
신동 강
 
Science of flight
angelagig
 
Seminar on u a-v
tarunnonmed
 
Drones the future technology
vikram singh
 
Drones and all about it seminar
Jayaram .P
 
Forestsurveying and engineering
iqbalforestry
 
Drones presentation
Amna Abrar
 
Bennington future technologies
rjensenesu3
 
Ad

Similar to Drone Presentation Edit (20)

PPTX
DRONE ACADEMY.pptx
ChennaiDroneAcademy
 
PDF
The Use of Drones in Environmental Monitoring and Conservation (www.kiu.ac.ug)
publication11
 
PDF
Drones in Disaster Response: Real-Time Data Collection and Analysis (www.kiu...
publication11
 
PDF
UAS- Unmanned Aircraft Systems Civil & Public Application_ Presentation
Luis Neto
 
PDF
Drone Image LLC | Drone Operators and Inspectors | Washington.pdf
Vograce
 
PDF
Military and law enforcement applications of UAVs have been placed u.pdf
akashganga11
 
DOCX
Thesis
Mark Enegren
 
PPTX
Use of Drones in Humanitarian Action and Disaster Management
Nepal Flying Labs
 
PPTX
Prop For Std UAV in CO EM [03102016]
Francis Song
 
PDF
Air power essay
Hope Millar ARAeS
 
PDF
Creating a buzz
adel mhiri
 
PDF
Creating a buzz
adel mhiri
 
PDF
Autonomous surface vessel for search and rescue operation
journalBEEI
 
PDF
Forest fires
LilyGurungcst
 
PDF
Small unmanned airships for remote perception
Adrian Peña
 
PDF
counter drone market
Defense Report
 
PPTX
DRONES.pptx
gopawita
 
PDF
Design of the Stampede Preventing Monitoring and Early Warning System Based o...
IJRES Journal
 
PPTX
use of drones.pptx
AMBIKABHANDARI5
 
DRONE ACADEMY.pptx
ChennaiDroneAcademy
 
The Use of Drones in Environmental Monitoring and Conservation (www.kiu.ac.ug)
publication11
 
Drones in Disaster Response: Real-Time Data Collection and Analysis (www.kiu...
publication11
 
UAS- Unmanned Aircraft Systems Civil & Public Application_ Presentation
Luis Neto
 
Drone Image LLC | Drone Operators and Inspectors | Washington.pdf
Vograce
 
Military and law enforcement applications of UAVs have been placed u.pdf
akashganga11
 
Thesis
Mark Enegren
 
Use of Drones in Humanitarian Action and Disaster Management
Nepal Flying Labs
 
Prop For Std UAV in CO EM [03102016]
Francis Song
 
Air power essay
Hope Millar ARAeS
 
Creating a buzz
adel mhiri
 
Creating a buzz
adel mhiri
 
Autonomous surface vessel for search and rescue operation
journalBEEI
 
Forest fires
LilyGurungcst
 
Small unmanned airships for remote perception
Adrian Peña
 
counter drone market
Defense Report
 
DRONES.pptx
gopawita
 
Design of the Stampede Preventing Monitoring and Early Warning System Based o...
IJRES Journal
 
use of drones.pptx
AMBIKABHANDARI5
 

Drone Presentation Edit

  • 2. Provide an Overview of Drone Technology Environmental Applications of Drone Technology Other Considerations Questions, Comments, Discussion
  • 3. An aircraft with the capacity to fly autonomously due to the support of on board computers and sensors. The US military has poured billions of dollars of research into these high tech tools, and now provide a low-cost option to the commercial market. (Source: Cielmap2012)
  • 5. Anyone Can Afford Them High quality drones now reach down to a price of as little as $1,000 Drones can now be a part of nearly any enterprise that can use them.
  • 6. MAV (Micro Air Vehicles): These aircraft are very small and operate at very low altitudes. VTOL (Vertical Take-Off & Landing): These aircraft require no vertical takeoff or landing LASE (Low Altitude, Short-Endurance): Launched by hand or catapult. LASE Close: Do require runways, larger size and weight confer increased capabilities. LALE (Low Altitude, Long Endurance): These UAS may carry payloads at high altitudes for extended periods. MALE (Medium Altitude, Long Endurance): Operating at high altitudes (9000m) for long extended distances. HALE (High Altitude, Long Endurance): These are the largest of the UAS. These UAVs may fly at high altitudes (20,000 m) for distances that extend thousands of km.
  • 7. Eco-Drones The technology while best known for gathering military intelligence now can perform environmental work at a fraction of the cost. Drones used for these purposes are known as eco-drones or conservation drones. Their agility and low cost quality imaging make them the ideal tool for environmental monitoring.
  • 8. Environmental Applications  Forest health monitoring:  Fire Mapping Applications  Forest inventory: Coarse-scale inventory  Wildlife surveys: Terrestrial flights for large-animal surveys extended operations.  Avalanche patrols:  Air quality monitoring:  Plume tracking: For monitoring of water pollution  Groundwater discharge monitoring:  Mine surveys: improve surveys and operations in open-pit mines.  Precision agriculture: Monitoring of crop health and precision application of chemicals.
  • 9. Brazil has purchased 14 drones for US$350 million for the Sao Paul Environmental Police to monitor deforestation in the Amazon, track poachers and seek out illegal mining operations (Cohen, The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has been using drones, to monitor illicit trade in Africa by tracking poachers and the wildlife they are pursuing in real time (WWF, 2012). The use of drones for monitoring destructive activities such as poaching and illegal logging have been notably applied in Africa, Asia and South America.
  • 10. Drones can be used to monitor highways vulnerable to landslides, using high resolution cameras to detect cracks that may indicate the onset of a landslide. Data collected from the drone can be used by authorities to initiate early warning allowing people to escape and those travelling to the area to avoid the disaster event before it occurs (Hinkley and Early Warning Applications The use of drones for early warning of forest fires has been tested by the US Forest Service. By collecting data on forest fires, firefighters can better plan and manage fires. While manned helicopters and planes could collect similar information, the flight costs, and risks involved are high. (Hinkley and Zajkowski, 2011) Quick and easy deployment ability Entering hazardous areas make drones a beneficial tool for collecting real-time data, mapping disaster impacts as they occur. Drones can provide real time information to emergency planners, showing where environmental conditions are worsening (i.e. flood spreading) and contribute to rescue efforts. (Hinkley and Zajkowski, 2011).
  • 11.  A developed system, using multispectral and electro- optical infrared cameras is now being used by the Italian Coast Guard for detecting illegal and unauthorized sewer and storm-drain environmental policy violations. (Watts, Ambrosia, Hinkley, E.A., 2012) Infrared thermography is an ideal tool to detect environmental contamination.
  • 12. Bridge Inspections Spatially Integrated Small-Format Aerial Photography (SFAP) is being developed which is a low-cost solution for bridge surface imaging and is proposed as a remote bridge inspection technique. It will Provide top-down views, drones flying at about 1000 feet can allow visualization of sub-inch (large) cracks and joint openings on bridge decks or highway pavements (Chen, S. E., Hauser, E. W., Boyle, C. G., & Natarajan, M. 2013).
  • 13. The University of Nebraska-Lincoln and the University of California- Berkeley were jointly awarded a nearly $1 million grant from the US Department of Agriculture for developing drones that can take water quality samples from lakes, rivers and streams). The project is still in the development stage, but the helicopter-type drones can already be deployed to collect small volume water samples from remote(Abourezk, 2013)
  • 14.  Many state and federal fish and wildlife agencies include a law enforcement arm. Some proposed legislation is loosely- written, and severely limits the use of drones by “law enforcement agencies” (The Pew Research Center 2014).  Politicians tend to follow public sentiment, thus increased awareness of drones has resulted in numerous bills being introduced in various state legislatures seeking to limit their use. Between the 2013 and 2014 state legislative sessions, over 40 states introduced bills addressing drones. Federal regulations are already in place, with more under review (The Pew Research Center 2014). Americans were recently surveyed about drone use, and 63% indicated that uninhibited personal and commercial drone use would represent a change for the worse. The ability of misuse and “mischief” with drones is real, and will undoubtedly develop into a new field of law, regulation, prohibited and permitted uses (The Pew Research Center 2014).
  • 15. The uses of drones are as numerous as the types of technological sensing and other uses that can be deployed on them. While concerns on human privacy are legitimate, its use as a cost effective management tool are too great to pass laws that would limit agencies from using them in environmental management, and other beneficial uses for the public good.
  • 16. Kurt W. Smith Professor of Environmental Management Methodist University Fayetteville, NC [email protected]

Editor's Notes

  • #4: I’m just going to point out to you, these are just some of the big ones that we have to deal with. And the list goes on…right here and over 100 others. There are so many environmental rules out there that it would be difficult for you to walk down the street on a given day and not inadvertently break some sort of law.
  • #5: Once again, we’re going to be talking about things we deal with in the environmental arena throughout the entire project delivery process. While we do the bulk of the work, the environmental arena, during this feasibility phase, you still have certain responsibilities and activities throughout this entire process that you have to deal with. These next three slides or so just simply lays out a whole series of these kinds of laws. We’ve got a slide coming up for each one.
  • #12: A developed system, using multispectral and electro-optical infrared cameras is now being used by the Italian Coast Guard for detecting illegal and unauthorized sewer and storm-drain environmental policy violations. (Watts, Ambrosia, Hinkley, E.A., 2012)