Tech startups innovate to snuff out wildfires

A Burnbot, which has been described as a giant, upside-down propane grill, scorches the ground to create a firebreak to keep wildfires from growing, on grasslands in June at Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif. High-tech entrepreneurs are trying to use new forms of technology to solve the problem of mega-wildfires in the age of climate change. (Ian C. Bates/The New York Times)

TWAIN HARTE, Calif. —This is the tinderbox of the Sierra Nevada. It’s early June, the temperature is 97 degrees Fahrenheit and the air shimmers over dead trees choked in brush. In the Stanislaus National Forest, logging roads wind through firs and ponderosa pines, past 20-foot-tall burn piles — tons of scrap wood not worth bringing to a sawmill. They’ve been assembled by workers on the front line of the fight against forest fires: a timber crew thinning these woods for the Forest Service and a tech startup that’s trying to automate the enormous machines the crew relies on.