• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • DroneRacingLife
  • DroneFlyers
  • Newsletter
DroneLife

DRONELIFE

Stay up to date on all the latest Drone News

  • News
  • Products
  • Industries
    • Agriculture
    • Construction
    • Delivery
    • Dual Use
    • Inspection
    • Public Safety
    • Surveying
  • Enthusiasts
  • Regulations
  • Business
  • Video
  • Podcasts

Students Compete in XPRIZE Wildfire Finals With AI Drone Firefighting

May 18, 2026 by staff Leave a Comment

Silicon Valley students take on pros with wildfire drones.

By Dronelife Features Editor Jim Magill

https://dronelife.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Powerus_xFold-DragonH-Fire.mp4

The prestigious XPRIZE competition to find innovative solutions to battle the global threat of wildfires has attracted teams from all over the world, including teams of professional firefighters and first responders, teams representing drone and software industry professionals and teams of university faculty and graduate students.

Yet, in addition to all the distinguished competitors, the finals event in the competition, set to take place across a wide expanse of Alaskan territory next month, will also feature a team of bright and energetic high school students, from Valley Christian, a K–12 school in the heart of Silicon Valley. The team of 20 students, led by drone and artificial intelligence (AI) industry professionals, is using drones and high-fidelity sensors to detect potentially dangerous wildfires at their outset and extinguish them before they can grow and become destructive infernos.

Working in a strategic partnerships with Kaizen Aerospace, a developer of heavy-lift autonomous UAVs, and SensoRy AI, a developer of sensor tools to provide ultra-early detection of wildfires and methane gas leaks, the team of young innovators has developed a system that can help deal with the growing worldwide scourge of potentially deadly blazes.

“It’s actually a really cool piece of technology that’s obviously being furthered by competitive landscapes such as XPRIZE,” Andrew Valkenburg, executive vice president of technology and manufacturing at Kaizen’s parent company, Powerus, said in an interview. 

The Wildfire Quest system employs sensor nodes that can be ground-based — either mounted on array towers and powered by generators or transported by vehicles — or carried aloft by drones. The highly sensitive sensors are designed to pick up traces of light, heat or smoke across a wide range of land surfaces.

Those sensor inputs are fused into our Kaizen’s XNav sensor fusion algorithm. In addition to sensor fusion, the XNav software also serves as the drone’s autonomous flight control ecosystem. 

“I can physically pilot the drones and program their waypoints as well as I can reconfigure how they fly in XNav,” Valkenburg said. “And then there’s a few other things you can do; fleet management to make sure your drones are managed and maintained, and terrain planning too.”

Terrain can prove to be a limiting factor in the detection and suppression of wildfires, which most often ignite in rugged or remote areas. “I need a sensor to be able to detect or predict what’s going to happen. And if there’s a large land mass, like a mountain in my way, I might not be able to see that,” Valkenburg said. “So XNav actually helps us to plan out where those sensors should be for best coverage as well.”

Once the software package has fused all the sensor inputs and charted out the lay of the land and determined what the current operating picture is, it’s able to autonomously deploy the firefighting drones to launch and to fly out to the target location, where they can then drop their payloads of fire-retardant bombs.

Students Compete on Level Playing Field

For Joshua Guo, a Valley Christian student who serves as the electrical engineering lead on the Wildfire Quest team, the XPRIZE competition has given him an opportunity to apply his scientific and technical skills in attempting to solve a real-world problem in a contest that places him on equal footing with much more experienced competitors.

“I first heard about XPRIZE when reading an online article about inventions,” he said. “I would say inventions are undervalued in society, and that they don’t happen enough because I guess they’re not rewarded, because they take effort, and based on my personal experience, it’s tough.”

As a southern California resident, Guo has a personal stake in the efforts to combat wildfires.

“A few years ago, during the wildfires that happened in Santa Cruz, one struck up near my house, and it was just a few miles away. We had to pack our bags, salvage all the memories we could get, and just do as much as we could to evacuate,” he said. 

“And in that moment, I was just thinking, ‘Is there really nothing I can do about this?’” he asked. “And I guess with XPRIZE Wildfire, when I first heard about the program and the opportunity to compete, it was: ‘That’s the answer to my question.’”

Guo said that although he was somewhat intimidated by the competition he would face in the challenge, he soon learned to overcome those feelings.

“Seeing these companies and universities as being our competitors, it can be, ‘Whoa, what am I supposed to do as a high school student?’” he said. “But throughout this XPRIZE competition, I’ve pushed past limits that I’ve never known I could.”

$11 Million in Prize Money

In the XPRIZE Wildfire competition, teams from around the world took part in a series of competitive rounds, vying for a chance to win all or part of a prize package worth a total of $11 million. Each team that survived one round of the contest received a potion of the prize money, with the grand prize- winning team set to receive $2.5 million.

“The first round, the qualifying submission, is completely on paper. You put your ideas and logistics all on paper and submit to XPRIZE, and through that, XPRIZE is able to evaluate the viability of your initial ideas and solution,” Guo said. “And through that, you can qualify for teams testing, which when is you submit a video of your solution, your basic prototype.”

The students of Valley Christian initially designed and built their first prototypes for the project and after the team qualified for the semifinal round, it then partnered with Kaizen Aerospace to take advantage of the company’s expertise in the operation of heavy-lift drones. “That’s when we really put our solution together, and we did a bunch of testing.”

 In the semifinal round of competition, the Wildfire Quest team was required to select a location where they could set a fire, in order to test their system under real-world conditions. The team picked the South Bay Fire Academy, located just a few miles from the school. 

Throughout the different rounds of competition, the team continued to innovate their fire-detection and -suppression system. The basic concept of the prize competition is to design a system that can speedily detection and suppress a fire in ways that surpass traditional fire-fighting methods.  

“So, for the finals, we’re using drones to detect and drones to suppress. They all run on complex AI models and software,” Guo said. For the suppression phase, the team is using a heavy-lift UAV that’s able to deploy fire-suppression capsules, which the students are engineering themselves. 

“Initially, we used fire-retardant balls that explode upon contact with fire, but of course, we can always improve and we can always change up. The fire-suppression capsules that the team plans to deploy in the final leg of the competition explode on contact with the fire and disperse a fire-retardant powder to extinguish the blaze. 

The final round of the competition will be held sometime in mid-June in the NANA Region of Alaska, a 1,000-square-kilometer rural region close to Fairbanks. Competing teams will be judged on their ability to detect a wildfire somewhere within the vast region and put out the blaze in the shortest amount of time.

Read more:

  • Buffalo’s Natrion Rolls Out NDAA-Compliant Drone Battery Cells

  • ePropelled Launches Integrated Power System for Agricultural Drones

  • FAA and DoD Are Building the Rules for Drones Operating Near Sensitive Airspace

Jim Magill is a Houston-based writer with almost a quarter-century of experience covering technical and economic developments in the oil and gas industry. After retiring in December 2019 as a senior editor with S&P Global Platts, Jim began writing about emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence, robots and drones, and the ways in which they’re contributing to our society. In addition to DroneLife, Jim is a contributor to Forbes.com and his work has appeared in the Houston Chronicle, U.S. News & World Report, and Unmanned Systems, a publication of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International.

Filed Under: Disaster Response, Drone News, Drone News Feeds, Drones in the News, Firefighter, News Tagged With: AI wildfire detection, autonomous drone firefighting, autonomous UAV wildfire, commercial drone news, drone AI wildfire, drone competition 2026, drone fire suppression, drone industry news, drone payload fire suppression, drone sensor fusion, drone wildfire detection, drone wildfire suppression, early wildfire detection, fire retardant drone, heavy-lift drone wildfire, high school drone team, Joshua Guo XPRIZE, Kaizen Aerospace, NANA Region Alaska drones, Powerus drones, SensoRy AI, Silicon Valley drone team, student drone competition, student innovation drones, unmanned aerial wildfire, Valley Christian School drones, wildfire AI drones, wildfire detection technology, wildfire innovation, wildfire prevention technology, wildfire technology 2026, XNav sensor fusion, XPRIZE finals Alaska, XPRIZE Wildfire, XPRIZE Wildfire competition

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

LATEST

Robin Radar Names Homeland Security and Defense Leads for US Expansion

The Hague-based maker of the IRIS drone-detection radar adds senior US sales leadership and larger Virginia headquarters as homeland security…

Continue Reading Robin Radar Names Homeland Security and Defense Leads for US Expansion

Buffalo’s Natrion Rolls Out NDAA-Compliant Drone Battery Cells

The Buffalo-based battery materials company debuts NDAA-compliant pouch cells with up to 80% more energy density than standard Li-ion. Natrion…

Continue Reading Buffalo’s Natrion Rolls Out NDAA-Compliant Drone Battery Cells

ePropelled Launches Integrated Power System for Agricultural Drones

New propulsion platform targets growing precision agriculture UAV market As agricultural drone adoption continues to expand worldwide, ePropelled has introduced…

Continue Reading ePropelled Launches Integrated Power System for Agricultural Drones

FAA and DoD Are Building the Rules for Drones Operating Near Sensitive Airspace

FAA and DoD Explore How Drones, Counter-UAS Systems, and Airports Can Share Airspace XPONENTIAL panel highlights growing cooperation between civil…

Continue Reading FAA and DoD Are Building the Rules for Drones Operating Near Sensitive Airspace

Urban UAV Operations Need More than Drones

Cloud Century has implemented more than 200 drone docks in China, learning what urban drone operations require. In this guest…

Continue Reading Urban UAV Operations Need More than Drones

MatrixSpace Brings Portable Counter-Drone Radar to Lithuanian Exercise

The xTechCounter Strike winner deploys portable AI-powered radar to strengthen low-altitude airspace awareness for M-SHORAD units in Pabradė. MatrixSpace is…

Continue Reading MatrixSpace Brings Portable Counter-Drone Radar to Lithuanian Exercise

Industrial Policy and Wright’s Law: A New Perspective on Building the U.S. Drone Industry

At the AUVSI XPONENTIAL 2026 conference this week, Red Cat Holdings executive Brendan Stewart delivered one of the more historically…

Continue Reading Industrial Policy and Wright’s Law: A New Perspective on Building the U.S. Drone Industry

How DHS Is Helping World Cup Host Cities Get Counter-UAS Ready Before FIFA 2026

DHS lab equips World Cup cities with counter-drone guidance. By DRONELIFE Features Editor Jim Magill (Editor’s note: This is part…

Continue Reading How DHS Is Helping World Cup Host Cities Get Counter-UAS Ready Before FIFA 2026

Project ULTRA Aims to Normalize Drone Operations in Shared Airspace

FAA, DoD, and industry partners use Grand Forks test environment to develop scalable systems for UAS, logistics, and counter-UAS coordination…

Continue Reading Project ULTRA Aims to Normalize Drone Operations in Shared Airspace

Michigan’s Bet on the Low Altitude Economy: How M Air Connects Aerospace Innovation and Detroit Manufacturing

At XPONENTIAL 2026 this week, leaders from University of Michigan outlined an ambitious vision for the future of drones and…

Continue Reading Michigan’s Bet on the Low Altitude Economy: How M Air Connects Aerospace Innovation and Detroit Manufacturing

Secondary Sidebar

Footer

SPONSORED

Inspired Flight Gremsy IF800 VIO F1 drones geo week

What Will It Take to Strengthen U.S. Drone Manufacturing? A Conversation with Inspired Flight’s CEO

Global Mapper Mobile data collection

Collection Ground Control Points with Global Mapper Mobile

Military Drone Mapping Solutions

How SimActive’s Correlator3D™ is Revolutionizing Military Mapping: An Exclusive Interview with CEO Philippe Simard

Photogrammetry Accuracy Standards

SimActive Photogrammetry Software: Enabling Users to Meet Accuracy Standards for Over 20 Years

NACT Engineering Parrot ANAFI tether indoor shot

Smart Tether for Parrot ANAFI USA from NACT Engineering

Blue Marble, features global mapper, features Blue Marble

Check Out These New Features in Global Mapper v25 from Blue Marble

About Us | Contact Us | Advertise With Us | Write for Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service

The Trusted Source for the Business of Drones.

This website uses cookies and third party services. By clicking OK, you are agreeing to our privacy policy. ACCEPT

Manage consent

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
CookieDurationDescription
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytics
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
SAVE & ACCEPT