Disaster Relief Australia operates in the recovery phase, as opposed to the response phase, says Richard Adams, National Director, Disaster Relief Australia. He says the organisation identified a gap between the emergency response stage and the assistance communities required post-disaster.
“We bring a suite of capabilities, from manual labour through to more specialised tasks such as deploying our own incident management teams, medical teams and training teams,” he says. “We do everything from debris removal, including people swinging chainsaws and cutting down burnt trees, through to mucking out houses after floods.”
DRA needed to have aerial imagery as part of its work with state governments, local authorities and private property owners. In the past, the organisation had relied on drones to get the imagery it needed. It realised the deficiencies of drone imagery when providing relief after the Kangaroo Island bushfires in the summer of 2019-20, which were a result of lightning strikes on December 20 of that year.
The deficiency of drones
Kangaroo Island has a landmass of 4,405 square kilometres, which means it’s not a small place. Adams created a drone flight plan for the island, and quickly realised that getting the required imagery would have required over 11,000 batteries. Nearmap provided a better, higher-resolution, and more cost-effective solution