President Donald Trump launched a
program on Wednesday to expand testing of drones to include flights over
people, nighttime operations and flights out of sight of the operator, the
White House said.
The pilot program aims to speed up the integration of unmanned
aerial vehicles into the national airspace system and test drone detection and
tracking while waiving some limits on their use.
Under a memorandum signed by Trump on Wednesday, states and local
governments would be able to seek Federal Aviation Administration approval for
testing and expanded use. The White House stopped short of proposing new
regulations that would allow broader nationwide use of drones or any timetable
for new authority.
White House adviser Michael Kratsios told reporters the
"program will open the skies for delivery of life-saving medicines and
commercial packages, inspections of critical infrastructure, support for
emergency management operations."
Kratsios said the program would allow companies and governments to
operate drones in ways that are currently restricted by the FAA "including
beyond-visual-line-of-sight flights, nighttime operations, and flights over
people."
Alphabet Inc and Amazon.com Inc are among a growing number of
companies hoping to make package delivery by drones a reality.
The memo said the Transportation Department could allow drone
flights at up to 400 feet with the goal of approving at least five pilot
projects. The program would expire in three years.
In 2016, the Obama administration opened the skies to low-level
small drones for education, research and routine commercial use, but left in
place significant restrictions.
The FAA estimates by 2021 the fleet of small hobbyist drones will
more than triple and commercial drones will grow tenfold to about 442,000.
In June, Trump told drone executives the administration wants
"to create new companies and lots of jobs... We're going to give you the
competitive advantage that you need."
In attendance were chief executives of drone companies including
Kespry Inc, AirMap, Airspace Inc, Measure UAS Inc, Trumbull Unmanned, and
Precision Hawk Inc.
Drone manufacturers have argued that the administration should
move faster to approve broader commercial use of drones and noted that the
Transportation Department does pre-approve self-driving vehicle technologies.
But security concerns remain.
In September, a civilian drone struck and damaged a U.S. Army
Black Hawk helicopter near Staten Island, New York.
This month, a drone hit an airplane landing at a Quebec City
airport, the first time an unmanned flying object collided with commercial
aircraft in Canada.
The FAA has banned drone flights over 133 U.S. military facilities
and over 10 U.S. landmarks, including the Statue of Liberty in New York and
Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota, at the request of national
security and law enforcement agencies.
The memo said that the Transportation Department would coordinate
with the Defense Department, Homeland Security and Justice Department to
consider public safety and national security risks in approving pilot projects.
The Commercial Drone Alliance said it was "optimistic that
the program will become a model for overcoming some of the hurdles keeping the
full potential of commercial drones from being realized."
Senator John Thune, a Republican, said the new policy
"provides sensible direction that promotes drone safety, innovation, and
local input."
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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