Australia's largest fire detection camera rollout
Friday 15 Aug 2025
Forestry Corporation is deploying early fire detection cameras
across NSW State forests in the largest rollout of this groundbreaking
technology in Australia. The network will be installed
across the state's major softwood growing regions, covering 1.2 million
hectares of land from Northern NSW to the NSW-Victoria border, with
cameras installed at 22 strategic locations.
Key regions monitored by the cameras include Tumut, Moss Vale, Bombala,
Walcha, and Bathurst, including three wind farm development zones near
Bathurst and Tumut.
The cameras will not only help protect critical plantation assets but
also neighbouring communities, national parks and privately-owned
agricultural land. The cameras will be provided by technology
provider Pano AI. Powered by artificial
intelligence, these cameras scan the landscape, track changes in pixel
colour detecting smoke columns, delivering real-time alerts to fire
crews and allowing rapid fire response.
Land Management & Innovation Manager Jamie Carter said the
cameras will enhance Forestry Corporation's existing fire tower
network, which is the largest in the country, by providing
additional coverage and extending fire detection during overnight hours
and in low-visibility conditions.
"This is a significant milestone after four years of trialing and
refining our approach to early fire detection," Mr Carter
said. "Following the significant impact of the 2019–2020
Black Summer fires where 25% of the pine plantation estate was burnt,
Forestry Corporation has focused on aligning technological advancement
with the needs of the NSW softwood estate.
"This solution provides a critical edge in the crucial first 30 minutes
after ignition, which is hugely important from a firefighting
perspective," he said.
Fire detection technology has been extensively trialled in the US, South
Africa and Europe and here in Australia trained to local
conditions.
Pano AI's Head of Australia GTM Andrew Prolov said the partnership with
Forestry Corporation was a clear signal that the technology is now
mature and accepted by industry and emergency services, playing a key
role in protecting lives and livelihoods.
"Pano's solution is trained on billions of images from diverse
landscapes, micro-climates, and seasons across Australia and
internationally," Mr Prolov said. "By combining AI detection with
advanced geospatial insights, it helps Forestry Corporation understand
the full context of each fire detected," he said.
Research shows that 80–85% of the area monitored by Forestry
Corporation's fire towers also includes surrounding private property and
public lands providing a significant and wide-reaching community
benefit. In regions like Bathurst, tower operators detect and report
more than half of all fires, often placing the first call to emergency
services across these land tenures.
"This technology won't replace our highly skilled fire tower
operators, but it's a powerful addition to our early detection
suite. We're proud to lead the way in this field," Mr Carter
added.
The rollout directly responds to key recommendations from the
Independent NSW Bushfire Inquiry that followed the 2019 /2020 Black
Summer fires, calling for enhanced remote fire detection capabilities.
Over the last two decades, approximately 70,000 hectares of softwood
forests in NSW have been impacted by fire. With State forests
producing enough timber each year to build 40,000 new homes,
strengthening early fire detection is critical to safeguarding the
state's timber supply.
Source: Forestry Corporation

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