9/11: Thoughts on the Anniversary of the WTC Disaster and First Use of Robots

9/11: Thoughts on the Anniversary of the WTC Disaster and First Use of Robots

Posted by admin on Sep 11, 2014 at 2:12 pm America/Chicago

I am spending the anniversary of 9/11 at the World Bank Headquarters at the World Reconstruction Conference. I was invited to give a talk on how disaster robots can be used for the recovery phase of disasters (as opposed to the search and rescue/response phase). In many ways, it was the kind of talk I had expected to give on the 13th anniversary of the first use of robots for a disaster.  I was able to proudly show  that land, sea, and aerial robots are already being used for recovery efforts. For example, the joint IRS-CRASAR team that fielded marine robots to the 2011 Japanese tsunami helped with the recovery of the region, re-opening the Minami-sanriku fishing port and finding polluting debris in the aquaculture. The decommissioning of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is likely to go on for decades and robots are essential to the safe and cost-effective work. But it was also the kind of talk that I hadn't expected to give because 13 years after the successful use of ground robots, 10 years after marine vehicles, and 9 years after small aerial vehicles, robots still are not routinized into disasters! The responders don't have them and as best I can tell in 36 disasters where robots have been reported to be used, the robots were borrowed in 35 cases- the agency that needed them didn't have them. The past 13 years have continued to show the potential, I believe the next 3 will be where we see the rapid adoption of disaster robotics. Our respects to the victims, their families, and the responders and my thanks to the great team that John Blitch pulled together for CRASAR's and the world's first use of robots.

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