Waterloo Region Record

Drone industry ready to take off

Lady Gaga’s Super Bowl halftime show highlights U.S. flood of unmanned aerial vehicles being registered for business uses

- Henri Gendreau and Alan Levin

A synchroniz­ed swarm of 300 drones lit up the night sky behind Lady Gaga, morphing into an American flag as she recited the Pledge of Allegiance.

Sunday’s Super Bowl halftime light show — prerecorde­d to comply with prohibitio­ns on flying drones over people — was choreograp­hed by Intel Corp.

It provided a dramatic backdrop for the performanc­e and also illustrate­d the ways large companies are embracing unmanned aircraft in sometimes unexpected ways.

The registrati­on of drones used for business has gone from a trickle to a flood. Only a handful were listed in the Federal Aviation Administra­tion’s aircraft registrati­on database a few years ago. That number swelled to 6,683 as of the end of 2016, according to agency records analyzed by Bloomberg.

The list of companies reads like a who’s who of top U.S. corporatio­ns, along with startups seeking to catch the wave of unmanned commerce. It comprises old-guard railroads like Berkshire Hathaway’s BNSF, utilities including Sempra Energy’s San Diego Gas & Electric Co., and technology companies like Microsoft, Amazon.com and a company that has supplied drones to Alphabet’s Project Wing.

In December alone, Disney Co.’s TV network, ABC Inc., registered 29 drones, bringing its total to 51.

“It does show that there is a lot of interest, and this industry is, pardon the pun, really ready to take off,” Tom McMahon, a spokespers­on for the Associatio­n of Unmanned Vehicle Systems Internatio­nal, a Virginia-based trade group, said in an interview.

The companies listed in the FAA’s database are the ones the public knows about. Most unmanned aircraft now are being registered in a new, separate online system that the agency has ruled isn’t public informatio­n. It has a total of more than 37,000 additional commercial drones registered since the agency created it a year ago.

Intel, for example, had registered 112 drones in the public database, giving it the secondlarg­est total. Those were for an earlier light show. The hundreds it has used for the Super Bowl and other recent events are registered separately in the nonpublic system, spokespers­on Krystal Temple said in an email. Temple declined to say how many unmanned craft the company has in the United States.

“Lady Gaga and the Super Bowl creative team wanted to pull off something that had never been done before,” Josh Walden, senior vice-president and general manager of Intel’s New Technology Group, said in a statement.

Because the light show was taped in advance due to restrictio­ns on the use of drones over people, fans in the stadium could only see it on the video boards, Temple said.

Before drone commerce can really flourish, the FAA must expand the current regulation­s that mostly prohibit flights above people and over long distances, according to the Small UAV Coalition trade group. A UAV is an unmanned aerial vehicle.

“But what we are seeing, which is incredibly exciting, is companies are investing in this,” Michael Drobac, the coalition’s executive director, said in an interview. The Washington-based group represents companies including Amazon and Intel.

The use of drones for business has benefited from regulatory changes. The FAA put rules in place last year allowing more routine commercial drone flights during the day, at low altitudes and within sight of an operator. It also set up a waiver process to allow night operations or other expanded missions if an applicant proves they are safe.

While automated drone deliveries and other far-flung uses won’t be permitted initially, the agency is laying the foundation for expansion.

It is crafting a proposal to allow some drone flights over people, for example.

Gaga’s rooftop opening portion of the Super Bowl show, with drones forming a starlike backdrop, was also pretaped prior to the game and fed into the broadcast, Temple said. Fans in the stadium could only see it on the video boards.

Through the end of 2014, there had been only about 230 drones registered with the FAA, almost all by companies manufactur­ing the devices, such as military supplier Aerovironm­ent Inc., academic institutio­ns researchin­g them or government agencies, according to FAA data.

That began to change after the FAA created a process in 2014 for businesses to use unmanned aircraft. By March 2015, at least 100 were being registered per month. The registrati­ons in the FAA’s public database peaked last May with 449.

An analysis of more than 5,500 of the initial permits granted for commercial drone flights issued by the FAA before the latest regulation­s went into effect found that most were for small companies with less than $1 million in annual revenue for purposes involving aerial photograph­y or data collection, according to the AUVSI.

One smaller company hoping to capitalize on the new industry had registered the most drones in the FAA’s system.

PrecisionH­awk USA Inc., which operates drones for agricultur­e and mapping, listed 113 of its aircraft, beating out Intel by a single drone, according to the FAA’s data.

The Raleigh, North Carolinaba­sed company provides drone services to companies that prefer not to own and operate them. Its remote sensors and mapping tools can be used by insurance agents documentin­g property damage and by farmers assessing their crops, said Thomas Haun, PrecisionH­awk’s vice-president of global strategy.

The company also has teamed up with Deere & Co. to add value to the data it collects. John Deere tractors can be programmed to automatica­lly fertilize needy patches of soil identified from drone flights.

Green Mountain Power Corp., which provides three-quarters of Vermont’s electricit­y, has 16 drones it uses for maintenanc­e, mostly in emergencie­s, spokespers­on Kristin Carlson said. It has even used drones to check on whether osprey nests on its poles were abandoned or occupied, said Mike Burke, director of field operations.

ABC’s news division is embracing drones in a big way, said Maria Stefanopou­los, production manager for the “Good Morning America” show.

The network is equipping every one of its field producers with an unmanned aircraft so they can be used to cover disasters and other breaking-news events, Stefanopou­los said.

A project to film a volcano in Iceland two years ago showed the value of mounting cameras on unmanned aircraft, she said, and they’ve been used since for coverage of forest fires and tornadoes.

“We realized it was going to change the way we told stories forever,” she said.

 ?? EZRA SHAW, GETTY IMAGES ?? Lady Gaga performs during the Pepsi Zero Sugar Super Bowl 51 Halftime Show at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas, last Sunday.
EZRA SHAW, GETTY IMAGES Lady Gaga performs during the Pepsi Zero Sugar Super Bowl 51 Halftime Show at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas, last Sunday.
 ?? ANDREW TESTA, NYT ?? An eagle from Guard From Above, a security company training the birds of prey to intercept drones, tackles a drone in the air in Katwijk, Netherland­s, in May 2016.
ANDREW TESTA, NYT An eagle from Guard From Above, a security company training the birds of prey to intercept drones, tackles a drone in the air in Katwijk, Netherland­s, in May 2016.
 ?? RICK BOWMER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this 2014 photo, a drone is demonstrat­ed in Brigham City, Utah.
RICK BOWMER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this 2014 photo, a drone is demonstrat­ed in Brigham City, Utah.
 ?? BRANDI JEWETT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this October 2016 photo, drone pilots for SkySkopes, a Grand Forks, N.D. company, gather at a practice airfield.
BRANDI JEWETT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this October 2016 photo, drone pilots for SkySkopes, a Grand Forks, N.D. company, gather at a practice airfield.

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