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NSW beaches to get dawn-to-dusk drone patrols in $34m anti-shark program
Surf Life Saving NSW will run daily drone flights across 70 beaches in NSW as part of a plan to put ‘more eyes in the sky’ to minimise shark interactions. Photograph: Anna Kucera/AAP View image in fullscreen Surf Life Saving NSW will run daily drone flights across 70 beaches in NSW as part of a plan to put ‘more eyes in the sky’ to minimise shark interactions. Photograph: Anna Kucera/AAP NSW beaches to get dawn-to-dusk drone patrols in $34m anti-shark program Premier Chris Minns says he wants to restore confidence to beachgoers after series of shark sightings and attacks Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast Shark-spotting drones will fly from dawn to dusk throughout the year at 70 beaches in New South Wales under an expanded monitoring program, the state government says. The NSW premier, Chris Minns, said the $34m initiative would restore confidence to beachgoers after a series of shark sightings and attacks. They include one by a great white shark on Sydney mother Leah Stewart, who is no longer in a critical condition following the attack at Coogee beach earlier this month. “While no one can ever promise no shark interactions, this investment is about putting more eyes in the sky so we can spot sharks earlier and give people a clear heads-up when they’re in the water,” Minns said on Sunday. Sydney shark attack survivor awake, alert and ‘remembers the whole event in detail’, brother says Read more The 70 beaches covered year-round from 1 July will include all 38 of Sydney’s ocean beaches plus 32 in the rest of the state. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email The expanded program also promises greater drone monitoring at other regional beaches, with daily flights from 1 December to 30 April, flights every weekend throughout the year, and extended daily flight hours. It will be carried out by Surf Life Saving NSW, which already undertakes drone surveillance, including an existing school holiday drone program along the coast. The organisation’s chief executive, Steve Pearce, said drones were already an “extremely effective component” of the state’s shark management program, “having this year alone identified and prevented over 2000 sharks interacting with swimmers and surfers, and conducting over 100,000 flights”. The funding will include trials of new artificial intelligence shark detection systems over summer that it is hoped will pave the way for automated flights. University of Sydney shark policy expert Associate Prof Christopher Pepin-Neff said the planned use of AI was a “ambitious and bold”. “But we need to be realistic about what drones can do and what they can’t do,” they said. “With more drones in the air, that is going to mean sharks are discussed a lot more across Australian beaches. “We need to treat the beach like the bush. It’s the wild.” Although coverage will not be limited to patrolled beaches, it will not take place at every beach in the state.