Robotic Showcase in Japan Offers a Glimpse into the Future of Rescue Operations

Robotic Showcase in Japan Offers a Glimpse into the Future of Rescue Operations

Visitors to the Japan Mobility Show will get a vision of the future of rescue in the disaster-prone country, including exoskeletons
AFP

With a drone camera, a survivor is‍ spotted in the rubble. ⁢A robot‍ on tracks brings him water‌ while rescuers in ​exoskeletons ⁣clear an ⁢escape⁤ route ⁣for ⁣an ‌autonomous stretcher to take her to safety.

This is the futuristic vision on display ⁢at the Japan Mobility Show, aiming to exhibit ⁢how technology⁤ can help and sometimes replace humans in a​ country short ‌of workers and no stranger to disasters.

But so as not‍ to alarm ⁢people, the ‍imaginary tragedy is unleashed by Godzilla, who ⁢has unleashed catastrophe in Japanese disaster films since the 1950s.

In ⁣Japan nearly 30 percent of the ‍country’s population is aged 65‍ and‌ over.

“Because of ⁤the decline of the ‍population ​there are fewer and fewer people available for dangerous tasks,” said Tomoyuki Izu, founder of Attraclab,⁢ a local ⁣start-up specialising in autonomous mobility.

“My idea is to help people such as firefighters with‍ my machines,”‌ Izu, 61, told AFP.

It was Attraclab that co-developed the small delivery robot squeezing‍ through the ‌cardboard rubble at the Japan Mobility Show and designed the remote-control stretcher on ‍wheels or tracks.

For now the Japanese government⁤ favours ⁤”traditional equipment” for relief efforts, he said‌ at the ‌event, which opens to ⁤the public this weekend.

But⁣ Izu‌ believes there will be a market for more advanced⁣ technology in the future.

“There’s ⁤a lots of anime with humanoid robots in Japan, and therefore people love them. But these kinds of autonomous vehicles are still very strange for them,” he ⁤said.

Since 2016, Japan’s⁤ Kawasaki⁤ Heavy Industries (KHI) has ⁢been developing Kaleido, a robust humanoid robot capable of delicately lifting and moving injured people.

“In‌ the future this robot will be able to ⁣save people, or go to dangerous zones,‍ like fires,”⁢ said Itsuki‌ Goda from the robotics division of KHI.

He⁢ conceded, though, that the ​machine needs more development on its scanning capabilities to get through difficult terrain.

“We need more years of ⁤development if we want to use it in real situations, where conditions‌ are always different,” he told⁣ AFP.

Kaleido’s current load capacity of 60⁢ kilograms ​(132 pounds)⁤ will be increased very soon with a ⁣new prototype, promised Goda.

Price​ is also an ‌issue.

Right⁤ now this robot is “maybe 10⁤ times more‌ expensive than a human, but ⁤if we produce 10,000 of them per year, the price will go down rapidly”, Goda added.

Since ‍the⁤ Fukushima nuclear disaster‍ in 2011, ‌another niche segment has exploded: ‍robots​ to clear up disaster areas that are difficult or ⁣dangerous⁤ to access.

Engineering firm Sugino Machine presented‌ a powerful but small robotic arm rigged on crawlers that can​ work⁣ in areas that emergency workers cannot go.

The machine was built in 2018 for a nationally ⁣run atomic research agency,​ as Japan⁣ continues ‍the work to decommission​ the Fukushima Daiichi⁤ nuclear ‌plant.

“This can ‌be ⁤used for initial damage assessment or to remove debris ‌or‍ to remove heavy items that people cannot lift,” Akira Inujima from⁢ Sugino Machine told AFP.

Various tools can be ⁤attached to its arm, such as ⁢image,‌ temperature or radioactivity‍ sensors, or a high-pressure water lance.

“We ‌have a shortage ⁤of labour. It ⁣is difficult​ to ‍go all⁢ robot. But we can offer solutions to⁤ help people’s work,” he said.

“After Fukushima, we⁤ have been able to continue ‍technological development because there has ‌been project after project (heavily supported by ⁣the ‌government), like removing debris, that needs our⁤ work,” ⁣Inujima said.

“It’s important to continue this​ work and not make this fade⁢ away.”

Robots

2023-11-02⁣ 22:41:02
Link from www.ibtimes.com

Exit mobile version