Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsShark drone program expands

Shark drone program expands

The Queensland Government is expanding SharkSmart drone surveillance as part of the Shark Management Plan with a permanent shark-spotting summer drone fleet and expanded it to six more beaches across the state including Kings Beach on the Sunshine Coast.

The move follows a four year drone trial which aimed to detect sharks and gather data on shark movements and behaviour and was run across 10 beaches including Noosa Main Beach, Coolum, Alexandra Headlands and Rainbow beaches between September 2020 and April 2024.

During the trial SLSQ pilots conducted 17,954 drone flights between September 2020 and April 2024 (16,601 at South East Queensland beaches, 1,353 at northern Queensland beaches) covering 7,181km.

The drones were operated on weekends, public holidays and Queensland school holidays and the hours varied depending on weather conditions, but usually began when beach patrol opens in the morning, with drones flown twice every hour, until around midday. Each flight was about 20 minutes. About five per cent of flights were cancelled due to bad weather.

A report on the trial showed sharks were sighted on 3.8 per cent of flights, with 676 shark sighting events recorded (a sighting event can be 1 individual shark or multiple), equating to 4,959 sharks seen across the trial.

Of these 676 sighting events, 190 were large sharks estimated to be >2m in total length and SLSQ evacuated people from the water on 39 occasions due to potential risks from large sharks sighted.

The report showed the number of drone shark sighting events (676) to be significantly greater than the number of sharks caught in Shark Control Program nets and drumlines deployed at the same beaches over the same time period (284).

A similar number of bull sharks were sighted on drones (23) compared to caught in nets and drumlines (26); however, the nets and drumlines caught 64 tiger sharks and five white sharks, whereas only one white shark was sighted on drones and no tiger sharks.

The report concluded this may indicate that tiger sharks and white sharks occur further offshore or that these species are caught at night when drones are not operating.

Nets and drumlines had a substantially higher environmental impact than drones due to the capture of 123 non-target animals (not including non-target sharks) at these 10 beaches during the trial period, the trial found.

Minister for Primary Industries Tony Perrett said the drone program had been expanded to some of Queensland’s most popular, and densely populated, beaches.

“We boosted the investment into the Shark Control Program by 151 per cent, resulting in more than $88 million of additional funding over the life of the plan to return it to its primary purpose; to protect swimmers at select beaches from shark attacks,” he said.

“Importantly, 60 per cent of the new investment delivers the non-lethal and innovative solutions that have been a key feature of the strengthened Shark Management Plan 2025-2029.

“The Crisafulli Government made a commitment to double its drone program to 20 beaches for the 2026–27 season and we are well on track to delivering – if not exceeding – that commitment to Queenslanders’ safety.”

For more information visit www.dpi.qld.gov.au/news-media/campaigns/sharksmart/equipment/drones.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

A week in paradise

The moment the Save the Date landed in the mailbox, I knew this wasn’t going to be just another wedding, it was going to...
More News

AKF celebrates women

This International Women’s Day, the Australian Koala Foundation (AKF) has celebrated the powerful women who refuse to give up — women who stand their...

MP back e-mobility inquiry findings

Noosa MP Sandy Bolton has welcomed the release of the State Development, Infrastructure and Works Committee’s report into E-Mobility Safety, following years of advocacy...

Batting dominance, lessons learnt

1st Grade – Home vs Nambour Uni Cricket Club (Red Ball One-Dayer) In a red-ball one-day clash at home, 1st Grade continued its aggressive approach,...

Vinnies Finderfest

Vinnies Queensland is bringing back the state’s biggest op-shop event with Finderfest 2026 Golden Giveaway, a thrilling 16-day shopping experience giving customers the chance...

Enquiry backs e-bike safety

Independent Member for Noosa Sandy Bolton has welcomed recommendations from a Queensland parliamentary inquiry into e-mobility safety, saying stronger regulation is urgently needed to...

Conflict at ’Friendly Games’

The 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne are often described as ‘The Friendly Games’. Swimming legend Dawn Fraser and fellow Olympians from the Sunshine Coast,...

Surfing’s forgotten origins

Last week in this space we talked briefly about the Caballito de Totora and Peru’s claim to have invented surfing around 3000 BC, a...

Aussie Noosa Group delivers solutions

When it comes to navigating the world of finance, confidence matters. That’s where Aussie Noosa Group stands apart. We’re not just here to process...

Multi-million dollar win

A man from Sydney’s Northern Beaches has become an overnight multi-millionaire after winning what is being described as Australia’s healthiest home - a record-breaking...

Framing the future

Sunshine Coast Art & Framing Gallery have 2 convenient locations, Noosaville and Minyama. Both stores offer custom framing, memorabilia & jersey framing and fine...