
Tsai inaugurates training facility for battle and natural disaster response
A state-of-the-art disaster response training center has launched, after six years of planning and construction. President Tsai Ing-wen and top defense officials attended the inauguration ceremony. The center can simulate combat situations and natural disasters using artificial intelligence, virtual reality, and augmented reality technologies. Tsai said the center would improve the combat capabilities of Taiwan’s military, while educating the general public on disaster response.
Defense minister Chiu Kuo-cheng, National Security Council Secretary-General Wellington Koo, National Defense Medical Center President Chen Yuan-hao, and President Tsai Ing-wen launch a new disaster training center.
After six years of planning and construction, the center was completed in July. Using artificial intelligence, the facility can produce simulations for training in combat scenarios, vehicle care, severe disasters, hazardous environments and material rescue. The center is also equipped with simulators of Black Hawk helicopters, AAV-7 amphibious assault vehicles and Humvee ambulances to provide enhanced rescue operation training to soldiers.
Tsai Ing-wen
President
The building we’re inaugurating today has a multifunctional rescue operation training environment that uses technologies like virtual reality and augmented reality to create realistic battlefield scenarios. We believe that in the future, the center will help improve the capabilities of rescuers responding to battlefield casualties and emergency rescue operations. This will afford greater protection to our military.
Tsai said the facility would enhance the care and protection of soldiers in battle and improve the combat effectiveness of Taiwan’s military. She said that through joint projects with the private sector, the training center would also improve society’s response to battle scenarios and major natural disasters.
Tsai Ing-wen
President
This year, the Medical Service Training Center started a team rescue course and trained almost 3,800 people. Besides strengthening the rescue capabilities of our military, it is a way to maintain their overall combat capabilities. The Medical Service Training Center does outreach events at schools and different groups to raise awareness about emergency rescue operations. Over the past few years, several NGOs have been formed to train the general public in tending to war casualties. All these efforts have helped raise awareness about the importance of civil defense.
In the future, the new facility will join forces with the National Police Agency, the National Fire Agency and various medical institutions. It will also reach out into the community to integrate military and civilian rescue procedures and educate the general public on civil defense concepts.
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2023-12-04