Fuji Heavy
Industries plans to use a robot to help clear mines in Croatia. The company,
best known as the maker of
Subaru cars, will begin
testing the robot in Croatia at the end of January 2006, the
Daily Yomiuri reported
this week.
The semi-autonomous 1.5 ton robot uses a metal detector and soil-penetrating
radar to detect the presence and shape of metal objects below ground.
Fuji Heavy claims that it can identify mines up to one metre below the
surface with better than 90 per cent accuracy. The firm is seeking approval from
the Croatian government and international organisations to deploy the robot more
widely.
Tens of thousands of mines were spread indiscriminately in Croatia and
neighbouring nations during the conflict surrounding the break up of Yugoslavia
in the early 1990s.
"The presence of landmines still cripples Croatia's recovery. Thirteen of 21
counties, measuring 1,700 square kilometres, are affected by landmines. The
threat restricts mobility and impedes development," said the
internationally-funded
Adopt-A-Minefield
programme in a report last year.
Landmines.org said
that it costs $30,000 to clear a typical 15,000 square metre minefield in
Croatia using today's technology.
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