Country for PR: China
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (China)
Thursday, March 18 2021 - 09:00
AsiaNet
Sonoma County Selects Alchera for AI-Based Wildfire Detection
SEOUL, South Korea, Mar. 18, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

- Alchera's visual AI technology able to provide early warning and alerts of 
wildfire events

Korea's leading visual recognition AI firm, Alchera Inc. (Kosdaq:347860), today 
announced that has been formally selected by California's Sonoma County to 
provide early warning alerts of pending wildfire events.  Alchera will offer 
consulting services to develop and deliver products utilizing state-of-the-art 
fire detection technologies based on machine learning with Artificial 
Intelligence (AI). The firm's visual anomaly detection solution can detect the 
start of a wildfire from a simple video.

Notably, Alchera's solution is the world's first commercialized 
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) offering for wildfire detection. 

In October of 2017, a series of destructive wildfires blazed through Northern 
California, including the Tubbs fire which burned 36,807 acres from Eastern 
Napa County to Santa Rosa, in which Sonoma County lost 6,000 structures and 21 
lives. Sonoma County opened an RFP to the public primarily in response to this 
event, as the fire was not detected until it was already too late. In January 
2021, Sonoma County officially selected Alchera as the contract winner after 
reviewing the submitted proposals. 

According to Sam Wallis, the Community Alert & Warning Manager of Sonoma 
County, "Sonoma County continues to invest in wildfire detection technology 
that will provide advanced smoke detection warning to emergency managers and 
first responders. As the field of artificial intelligence has advanced in 
sophistication, we are excited to add such a monitoring system to our alert and 
warning toolkit."

The company has been working to develop camera-based fire detection algorithms 
or visual anomaly detection technologies since 2018. The first such deployment 
was with Korea's largest utility, KEPCO (Korea Electric Power Corp.) to deploy 
fire detection systems in both indoor and outdoor environments. From then, 
Alchera has been processing millions of images—detecting hundreds of 
early-stage wildfire ignitions from ALERT Wildfire cameras since June of 2019 
through various proof of concepts and trials.

"With our cutting-edge AI-based wildfire detection system, we are able to help 
reduce the damage of forest fires in California, which, as we have seen, 
suffers greatly from this phenomenon every year," said Young-Kyoo Hwang, CEO, 
Alchera. He added, "We are very grateful and honored to see our firm's 
technology being recognized worldwide. We are now expanding into global markets 
in earnest with this export to the US market." 

The firm will start to implement real-time early wildfire detection on Sonoma 
County cameras from March 2021. The project is intended to run until March of 
2023.

To visit the website 
https://fire.aiir.ai/sonoma

Learn more about Alchera's visual anomaly detection solution at
https://aiir.ai/industries/fire-detection/ 

For video, visit: 
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1RmP3AaVFAgaZZzlTUDT8Pu5Se0eQKj7q?usp=sharing


About Alchera

Alchera Inc. is one of Korea's fastest-growing technology companies, providing 
visual AI to the most prominent corporations and the South Korean government. 
With more than 80 employees at the headquarters, Alchera Inc. employs 50+ 
engineers, the majority specializing in machine learning and computer vision, 
the others specializing in data and software engineering.
Learn more at: www.alcherainc.com. 

Source: Alchera Inc.

Image Attachments Links:

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=386782

   Caption: Forest fire smoke detected (in the blue box) in Osborne, California 
by Alchera’s AI, taken during the bidding period in August 2020.

   Link: https://iop.asianetnews.net/view-attachment?attach-id=386783

   Caption: Real-time monitoring dashboard connected to 200 cameras in 
California, provided by ALERT Wildfire.

Attachments
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