An Australian engineer has revealed a plan to combat deforestation by using drones to plant one billion trees every year.
Susan
Graham, an Australian engineer, revealed on June that she had developed
a drone capable of scanning the land for ideal places to grow trees
then launch seeds into the soil.
According to United
Nations data, deforestation accounts for 17 per cent of the world’s
carbon emissions, more than the transportation industry. More than 15
billion trees are lost to the world every year as civilisation continues
to expand.
Graham said the drone can plant trees in
previously inaccessible places, such as the side of steep hills.
“Although we plant about 9 billion trees every year, that leaves a net
loss of 6 billion trees,” Graham told Australian media on Sunday. “The
rate of replanting is just too slow.”
BioCarbon
Engineering, the team she is working with, consists of researchers from
around the world who have developed the drone that plants at “10 times
the rate of hand planning and at 20 per cent of the cost.”
Current design
Lauren Fletcher, BioCarbon chief executive officer and former
National Aeronautics and Space Administration engineer, said the current
design of the drone could carry 150 germinated seeds at a time.
“We’re
firing at one a second, which means a pair of operators will be able to
plant nearly 100,000 trees per day — 60 teams like this will get us to a
billion trees a year,” Fletcher said.
The drone has
been tested at abandoned mine sites in New South Wales that are in need
of re-vegetation. A second drone has been developed for this purpose
with the ability to spread seeds over a wider area.
”Coal
mines have an enormous amount of land that they need to restore, both
on the active mine site, once they’ve recreated a land form, as well as
their offset areas... around the mines,” Graham said.
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