Aurora-based Columbia Helicopters and Aurora Flight Sciences, a Boeing Company, this week entered into a memorandum of understanding to explore the design, integration, testing and demonstration of new technologies aimed at improving aerial wildland fire suppression.
Since aerial firefighting began, fire suppression from aircraft has largely remained a clear air, daytime endeavor. Visibility hazards such as wildfire smoke limit aircraft operations on fires to approximately one-third of the available day.
While night vision devices have enabled some expansion to night operations, nothing currently exists to enable pilots to fly safely in degraded visual environments (DVEs) caused by thick and persistent smoke during the day.
Even during the destructive wildfires of last September, willing helicopter pilots at the Aurora State Airport were grounded during the earliest days of the crisis due to smoke and debris.
Columbia and Aurora hope to overcome these limitations with a new flight system that integrates multiple aircraft-mounted sensor technologies, which enhance situational awareness and deliver a real-time, clear, synthetically adapted image to the pilot.
“This technology brings the true capability to operate safely in DVE conditions, day or night, vastly expanding Columbia’s capabilities,” said Santiago Crespo, Columbia’s vice president of growth and strategy.
“When aircraft have the ability to fight fires in all conditions, they can significantly contribute to reducing acres burned and the overall ballooning cost of fires.”
A 2018 report by the U.S. Department of the Interior estimated that safe employment of aerial fire suppression during DVE conditions could reduce acres burned by 1 million acres a year, and reduce annual suppression costs by $300 million.
The DVE flight system is expected to combine inputs from an onboard modular sensor suite with Aurora’s automated trajectory planning technology to identify safe flight paths.
Data from these systems are visually represented in a transparent heads-up display mounted to the pilot’s helmet, providing navigation and critical flight data in a simple real-time display to support both daytime and night-time operations.
Under the terms of the understanding, the parties expect Aurora would be responsible for developing and testing the technology while Columbia would be responsible for providing the aircraft, integration of the system, support, and operator subject matter expertise.
Once a system is developed, tested, and integrated, Columbia and Aurora plan to hold demonstrations for the U.S. Department of Interior, U.S. Forest Service, and state fire agencies with the goal of encouraging legislation and contract language that allows for the new technology’s use on the country’s growing wildfires.