ֱ

AI and satellites help aid workers respond to Myanmar earthquake damage

AI and satellites help aid workers respond to Myanmar earthquake damage
This combination created on Mar. 29, 2025, of handout satellite images taken by 2025 Planet Labs PBC shows the Masoeyein Monastery and surrounding area on Oct. 29, 2023 (L) in Mandalay, Myanmar (L), and the damage in the same area on Mar. 29, 2025 (R) following the Mar. 27, 2025, earthquake. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 01 April 2025

AI and satellites help aid workers respond to Myanmar earthquake damage

AI and satellites help aid workers respond to Myanmar earthquake damage
  • “The biggest challenge in this particular case was the clouds,” said Microsoft’s chief data scientist, Juan Lavista Ferres
  • “There’s no way to see through clouds with this technology”

MANDALAY, Myanmar: Just after sunrise on Saturday, a satellite set its long-range camera on the city of Mandalay in Myanmar, not far from the epicenter of Friday’s 7.7 magnitude earthquake that devastated the Southeast Asian country’s second-largest city.
The mission was to capture images that, combined with artificial intelligence technology, could help relief organizations quickly assess how many buildings had collapsed or were heavily damaged and where helpers most needed to go.
At first, the high-tech computer vision approach wasn’t working.
“The biggest challenge in this particular case was the clouds,” said Microsoft’s chief data scientist, Juan Lavista Ferres. “There’s no way to see through clouds with this technology.”
The clouds eventually moved and it took a few more hours for another satellite from San Francisco-based Planet Labs to capture the aerial pictures and send them to Microsoft’s philanthropic AI for Good Lab. By then it was already about 11 p.m. Friday at Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, Washington. A group of Microsoft workers was ready and waiting for the data.
The AI for Good lab has done this kind of AI-assisted damage assessment before, tracking Libya’s catastrophic flooding in 2023 or this year’s wildfires in Los Angeles. But rather than rely on a standard AI computer vision model that could run any visual data, they had to build a customized version specific to Mandalay.
“The Earth is too different, the natural disasters are too different and the imagery we get from satellites is just too different to work in every situation,” Lavista Ferres said. For instance, he said, while fires spread in fairly predictable ways, “an earthquake touches the whole city” and it can be harder to know in the immediate aftermath where help is needed.
Once the AI analysis was complete, it showed 515 buildings in Mandalay with 80 percent to 100 percent damage and another 1,524 with between 20 percent and 80 percent damage. That showed the widespread gravity of the disaster, but, just as important, it helps pinpoint specific locations of damage.
“This is critical information for teams on the ground,” Lavista Ferres said.
Microsoft cautioned that it “should serve as a preliminary guide and will require on-the-ground verification for a complete understanding.” But in the meantime, the tech company has shared the analysis with aid groups such as the Red Cross.
Planet Labs says its satellites — it has 15 of them orbiting the Earth — have now photographed roughly a dozen locations in Myanmar and Thailand since Friday’s quake.


Belgium probes drone sightings after flights halted overnight

Belgium probes drone sightings after flights halted overnight
Updated 4 sec ago

Belgium probes drone sightings after flights halted overnight

Belgium probes drone sightings after flights halted overnight
Quintin said that investigations were underway to try to identify how many drones were involved
"We must act in a calm, serious and coordinated manner"

BRUSSELS: Belgian authorities on Wednesday investigated drone sightings that halted air traffic overnight at several airports, as flights resumed after hundreds of passengers were left stranded.
The main airport in Brussels and another in Liege had to suspend arrivals and departures late Tuesday for several hours after suspected drones were spotted nearby.
Dozens of passenger and cargo flights were cancelled and some 500 passengers forced to spend the night at Brussels Airport in the Belgian capital.
Interior Minister Bernard Quintin said that investigations were underway to try to identify how many drones were involved in the latest such incident in Europe and who was behind them.
The government was set to hold an emergency meeting of its national security council on Thursday to discuss the disruptions.
"The recurrence of drone-related incidents directly affects the security of our country," Quintin wrote on X.
"We must act in a calm, serious and coordinated manner."
The interruptions came after a recent spate of mysterious drone incidents targeting airports and sensitive military locations in several European countries, including Germany and Denmark.
Suspicions have swirled over potential Russian involvement in increased drone activity across Europe, with tension high as the war in Ukraine drags through its fourth year.
Over the weekend, Belgian authorities reported drone activity over the Kleine-Brogel military base, where a number of US nuclear weapons are believed to be stored.

- 'Trying to sow panic' -

A spokesman for air traffic controller Skeyes told AFP that flights had been able to restart by the early morning after the interruption.
Some 400-500 passengers had to spend the night at Brussels Airport because of the sightings, airport spokeswoman Ariane Goossens told AFP.
A spokesman for Liege airport -- a major freight hub that operates many overnight flights -- said the incidents were "worrying for national security".
Flights were able to start again at the airport in the early hours of Wednesday after a six-hour hiatus, spokesman Christian Delcourt said.
Authorities on Wednesday evening received several reports of a possible drone near a military barracks in Heverlee, east of Brussels, but local police could not confirm if the device had been a drone, a spokesperson told AFP.
Flemish media outlet HLN also reported more drone sightings near the Kleine-Brogel military base on Tuesday evening, but that was not confirmed by authorities either.
Defence Minister Theo Francken earlier refused to point the finger at Russia for the weekend sightings near the base, but said that they appeared to be a coordinated operation carried out by "professionals".
"They are trying to sow panic in Belgium," Francken told local media. "This is destabilisation."