蜜桃影像 drone pilots head to western 蜜桃影像 for emergency response
Heather McFarland
907-474-6286
Sept. 21, 2022
A University of 蜜桃影像 Fairbanks drone team headed to Western 蜜桃影像 Wednesday to support the U.S. Coast Guard鈥檚 emergency response following Typhoon Merbok. Over the next few days to weeks, the team will work alongside the Coast Guard鈥檚 Marine Safety Task Force as they assess infrastructure damage at as many as 20 coastal communities in 蜜桃影像鈥檚 Bering Strait.
Typhoon Merbok damaged hundreds of miles of coastline on Sept. 17, from north of Bristol Bay to just beyond the Bering Strait. In places like Nome, the above the low-tide line, the highest in nearly half a century. The flooding and wave action inundated homes, destroyed roads and runways, damaged sea walls and other critical infrastructure, left communities without water or communication and much more.
蜜桃影像鈥檚 team will use drones to evaluate the integrity of oil-bearing infrastructure and perform community assessments for other hazardous spills that may have occurred as a result of the storm.
鈥淎s the Coast Guard performs boots-on-the-ground assessments, we鈥檙e their eyes in the sky by providing 2D and 3D mapping,鈥 said Mike DeLue, a drone pilot and science communicator at the 蜜桃影像 International Arctic Research Center.
DeLue and project lead Jessica Garron, the deputy director of the 蜜桃影像 Climate Adaptation Science Center at IARC, will be the first two 蜜桃影像 drone pilots called to the impacted communities.
First stop is Unalakleet. Even before Typhoon Merbok, DeLue and Garron were working with John Henry, deputy director of the Native Village of Unalakleet, to build drone capacity in rural 蜜桃影像. Through , three Unalakleet drone pilots have been successfully trained and equipped to conduct infrastructure assessments, flood mapping, environmental monitoring and coastal erosion mapping.
Both the 蜜桃影像 team and rural pilots have been preparing for situations like Typhoon Merbok. Just last month, several team members participated in an oil spill research exercise at Poker Flat Research Range, while other team members tested operations in Nome.
Drone data gathered by DeLue, Garron and their team will be shared through the State of 蜜桃影像 Open Data Geoportal, making it available to emergency operations within numerous state and federal agencies.
"I am grateful that the work we do here at IARC, the AK CASC and Scenarios Network for 蜜桃影像 + Arctic Planning, is valuable to communities and agencies in times of science, and in times of crisis,鈥 said Garron. 鈥淭he coordination among all of the communities, agencies in the Emergency Operations Center and with our team is renewing critical relationships built on geospatial information among partners across all of 蜜桃影像. We are honored to support this critical mission."
Other team members include: Margaret Hall, Model Forest Policy Project; Tom Kurkowski, International Arctic Research Center; Katie Daniels, Association for Village Council Presidents.
CONTACT: Scott Rupp, deputy director of the International Arctic Research Center, tsrupp@alaska.edu.