
Southeast Asia Information Port News (www.dnyxxg.com) – On May 11, the Zhejiang Provincial Department of Emergency Management released an "AI + Mine Monitoring and Early Warning" application, focusing on issues such as scattered mine safety monitoring data and reliance on manual risk assessment, to build a comprehensive, intelligent, and efficient mine safety supervision system.
"We have integrated mine data from Zhejiang Province, deployed 14 intelligent analysis devices, developed 23 AI video algorithms, and trained them on over 200,000 images. This allows for automatic identification of 23 types of safety hazards, including overcrowding at mining faces and violations in inclined shaft transportation, around the clock," explained a relevant official from the Zhejiang Provincial Department of Emergency Management.
A mining company in Quzhou is a pilot enterprise for this application. In April of this year, an overcrowding situation occurred at one of the company's mining areas during shift handover. The "AI + Mine Monitoring and Early Warning" system immediately identified the excessive number of people in the area and issued an alarm, while simultaneously pushing the information to relevant personnel, promptly resolving the safety hazard.
"Through 'AI + Mine Monitoring and Early Warning,' we have achieved a transformation from 'human-to-human, experience-based, and luck-dependent' to 'AI-driven monitoring, data-driven calculation, and precise prevention.'"
On the same day, in addition to the "AI + Mine Monitoring and Early Warning" application, the Zhejiang Provincial Department of Emergency Management also released embodied intelligence (reconnaissance and communication 1.0) equipment. This equipment addresses the challenges of severe signal blockage and delayed on-site reconnaissance in confined space disasters, integrating cutting-edge technologies such as embodied intelligence and large-scale AI models to construct an emergency rescue model of "machine replacing human, intelligent analysis, pre-event early warning, and rapid response." (End)