A new artificial intelligence-driven tool adopted by four Central Texas fire departments could improve how officials prepare for and respond to wildfire threats.
Diving in deeper
Known as the Mitigate platform, the new tool has been adopted by Lake Travis Fire Rescue, Pflugerville Fire Department, Westlake Fire Department and Travis County Fire Rescue.
Developed by fire science company FiSci, Mitigate combines data on vegetation, weather and topography to simulate how wildfire could spread, according to a news release. Mitigate uses proprietary AI and predictive analytics to produce maps highlighting risk areas, how fast fires could spread and more.
“Central Texas is a patchwork of grasslands, wooded corridors, and dense neighborhoods. Each of those environments reacts differently to fire,” said Ken Bailey, Travis County Fire Rescue fire chief, in the news release. “This modeling helps us see those differences clearly and plan around them, well before smoke is in the air.”
The platform also allows agencies to test fire mitigation in a virtual environment, and has been used in evacuation planning for communities with narrow roads or limited exits.
“This gives us a clearer sense of timing,” said Bobby Abbott, Lake Travis Fire Rescue fire chief, in the news release. “We can estimate how quickly a fire might compromise evacuation routes, how wide the fire front could become, and when sheltering in place or moving residents to a refuge area might actually be safer than a full evacuation.”
What else?
The agencies have started comparing the model’s projections with past fire behavior under similar conditions, and early findings suggest the models closely match the real-world outcomes, the news release states.
“The real payoff may be on the prevention side,” said Nick Perkins, Pflugerville Fire Department fire chief. “By identifying areas more likely to experience large-scale fire spread, we can focus mitigation efforts, community outreach, and public education where they’re most likely to make a difference.”
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In case you missed it
The adoption of the technology comes on the heels of a countywide burn ban in unincorporated areas of Travis County, which was extended Feb. 24 due to continued dry conditions. The ban remains in effect through March 24 unless the county judge or fire marshal lifts it earlier.
Similarly, agencies such as the Southwestern Travis County Groundwater Conservation District declared an extreme drought in its area Feb. 19 due to dry conditions and are calling for water reduction from users.