Researchers look to artificial intelligence programs to predict wildfires
EDMONTON — Researchers and forest managers are turning to artificial intelligence in the hope it can help them predict the risk of catastrophic wildfires as climate change continues to rewrite the rule book.
It’s been the subject of more than 150 recent academic studies, said Mike Flannigan, director of the Western Partnership for Wildland Fire Science at the University of Alberta.
“It is definitely front and centre in terms of the research agendas in terms of wildland fire and will continue to be for the next years,” he said.
One insurance company says it has already developed an artificial intelligence program that can assess fire risk well in advance.