In Historic First, FAA Approves Fully Automated Commercial Drones In US Skies
In Historic First, FAA Approves Fully Automated
Commercial Drones In US Skies
BY TYLER DURDEN FRIDAY, JAN 15, 2021 - 18:40
In nothing less than a revolutionary step for aviation and which
will forever alter the skies over America, on Thursday the Federal
Aviation Administration for the first time issued approval for the first fully
automated commercial drone flights.
It's been revealed Friday that the FAA granted a small
Massachusetts-based company called American Robotics Inc. the authorization to
operate automated drones, meaning they won't need either hands-on piloting
on the ground or direct observation while in flight.
Commercial drone operation was already given approval under extremely limited conditions - for example as a remote inspection tool for agricultural areas or railroads, but so long as human operators were in the vicinity, along with spotters.
The Wall Street Journal reports of the new approval:
"...in its action Thursday, the FAA granted American Robotics Inc.,
based in Marlborough, Mass., permission to fly in U.S. airspace without anyone
controlling or monitoring it on site, according to Lisa Ellman,
a lawyer in the Washington, D.C., office of Hogan Lovells, who represents the
company and also is executive director of the Commercial Drone Alliance, an
industry trade group."
In particular its Scout drones will "operate under
predetermined flight programs and use acoustic technology to detect and avoid
drones, birds and other obstacles," according to the WSJ report.
The news also comes as the FAA this week is implementing new
aviation rules which are expected to allow for eventual
broad expansion of drone deliveries by companies like Amazon. However,
authorities have remained cautiously slow given the immense safety concerns both to
traditional aviation and air travel, as well as to bystanders on the
ground, and the fact that commercial drone delivery traffic is
likely to be most active over dense residential areas.
"The new rules make way for the further integration of drones into our
airspace by addressing safety and security concerns," FAA Administrator
Steve Dickson earlier this week. "They get us closer to the day when we
will more routinely see drone operations such as the delivery of
packages."
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