14-year-old Indian boy develops anti-landmine drones

An Indian boy has signed a deal to commercially produce anti-landmine drones.

The child prodigy, who has already developed a prototype, says the idea came to him after learning in the media about the high army casualties caused by land mines.

The zealous inventor, Harshwardhan Zala, is a tenth-grader from Gujarat state in western India.

During the Vibrant Gujarat summit, a platform for exploring business opportunities that took place from January this year, Harshwardhan managed to sign a Rs 5-crore deal to produce drones with the Government of Gujarat’s Department of Science and Technology worth about $733,000.

Harshwardhan presented a prototype of the drone that he began developing back in 2016.

It had cost him Rs 5 lakh (about $7,300) to make and was partially financed by the government.

The young mogul says the inspiration struck him when he was watching television and learned that “a large number of soldiers succumb to injuries sustained due to landmine blasts while defusing them manually.”

Speaking to the Times of India, the teenager explained that the drone is equipped “with infrared, RGB sensor and thermal meter along with a 21-megapixel camera with a mechanical shutter that can take high-resolution pictures as well.”

“The drone also carries a bomb weighing 50 grams that can be used to destroy the landmine,” he added.

Harshwardhan says he initially created a land mine detecting robot, but then realized that “since the weight is heavy it would trigger a blast and damage it… So I thought of creating a drone which will be at a safe distance while detecting the mines.”

Now the Gujarat government hopes that these anti-landmine drones will be commercially produced.

“An MoU has been signed with him and, in the coming days, Gujarat government will work with him on this project,” said Dr. Narottam Sahu, head of the Gujarat Council on Science and Technology.

The 14-year-old believes that his drones will be cheaper than those used by the army.

“For the final prototype that I created, it cost me around 3.2 lakhs ($4.6), and improving it further may increase the cost a little but it will be still cheaper than the present system used in the army,” he said.

Harshwardhan says he has already set up his own company, Aerobatics 7, and calls himself “Robotics Developer, Drone Maker, Coder” on Instagram.

 

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