Underwater robots can inspect floating solar farms, says local tech firm
SINGAPORE : An autonomous underwater robot used to inspect piers and vessels in the maritime sector may soon be diving into survey infrastructure at floating solar farms here.
That is one area in which Ms Grace Chia, 29, and her team from maritime tech start-up BeeX believe their robots can be useful.
BeeX, which was started in October 2018, on Tuesday (Nov 17) won the fourth Smart Port Challenge organised by Port Innovation Ecosystem Reimagined @ BLOCK71, a collaboration between the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore and NUS Enterprise.
A total of 187 pitches were received from start-ups around the world, from which 16 were selected for a six-week programme to further pursue their proposals.
A final eight were selected to pitch their ideas to a panel of judges at Shaw Foundation Alumni House auditorium on Tuesday, and BeeX took the $10,000 cash prize.
Ms Chia, who is the chief executive officer and co-founder, said that using autonomous robots for underwater operations can be cheaper than using traditional manned vehicles, and also more efficient and safer than using divers.
Each robot can be programmed to do specific tasks, and are then left to complete the operation while being remotely monitored.
BeeX is also looking at deploying the robots to help in the pursuit of cleaner energy here.
Floating solar farms, like the one being built in Tengeh Reservoir, also require regular large-scale inspections, which the BeeX robots are suitable for, said Ms Chia.
BeeX used to survey offshore oil and gas rigs, before pivoting towards operations closer to shore. Ms Chia said the current field is more cost sensitive, and the team had to relook its pricing strategy.
“The difference between energy and maritime is that energy has very few customers and they’re all very big, but maritime has a lot of customers and they are very diverse,” she explained.