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Students Win James Dyson Prize for New Bushfire Invention

With countries around the globe starting to feel the effects of devastating bushfires, the new tech protection system could help combat the growing problem.

An engineering team from Heriot-Watt University has won a cash prize and a national 2022 James Dyson prize for inventing a new automated system for tackling bushfires.

Five students hailing from India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Egypt – studying at Heriot-Watt’s Dubai campus – designed a system called “FireOut” after being horrified by devastating wildfires in countries like Australia.

“The 2019-2020 bush fires caused tremendous damage,” the Heriot-Watt students said in a joint statement. “This motivated us to develop a system capable of detecting and controlling fires at early stages.”

All the judges credited how the students identified a pressing current day problem and designed a potential solution.

Dr. Suaad Al Shamsi, the UAE’s first female Emirati aircraft engineer and one of the local James Dyson Award judges, said: “The team noted that regions that suffer from bushfires in the dry season tend to receive heavy rainfall in the wet season, so they designed a rainwater storage system.

“Using sensor cameras and a communications system, their invention can automatically start bringing fires under control before the first responders arrive – saving time, life and land.

“Once the fire is brought under control, the pumps can be closed, ready for the storage towers to collect rainwater again.”

Existing technologies only detect wildfires and wait for the first responders to arrive. The firefighters often only have a limited water supply, which can result in the fire burning longer.

The team won the equivalent of £5,000 in their local currency as winners of the UAE National prize in the 2022 James Dyson Award. The competition is an annual student design competition run in different countries around the world by the charity of billionaire British inventor and industrial designer, James Dyson.

The prize money can be used towards the next development phase of the team’s invention.

Dr. Suaad Al Shamsi added: “We were fascinated by the FireOut invention. All the judges credited how the students identified a pressing current day problem and designed a potential solution.”

The team members are Tasneem Nawar, a fourth-year chemical engineering student from Egypt; Eman Rashid, a fourth-year mechanical and energy engineering student from Pakistan; Zahid Rehman, a fourth-year automotive engineering student from Bangladesh; Deenah Sabaahat, a third-year electrical and electronic engineering student and Zahrah Tungekar, a fourth-year mechanical engineering student – both from India.

The group said it was exciting to see how the project made their different specialities come together seamlessly.

SOURCE: DIGIT Students win James Dyson prize for new bushfire invention (digit.fyi)

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