The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Drone pilots’ US$2,000 paydays drop 90% in ‘race to the bottom’

- By THOMAS BLACK

DALLAS: Andy Trench made US$2,000 a day in 2015 taking skyhigh photograph­s along the east coast with a drone he made himself. Now, that same work fetches about US$175.

“It’s apparent that a lot of this industry is a race to the bottom,” said Trench, a Rhode Island entreprene­ur who’s been operating remote-controlled aircraft for more than a decade.

Three years after federal regulators began allowing commercial drone flights, the fever to cash in has turned into a pitched battle for business. Prices for collecting airborne data have plummeted amid a flood of competitio­n equipped with cheap, hi-tech aircraft that practicall­y fly themselves. That’s pressuring operators, while handing customers new opportunit­ies for affordable drone inspection­s, pictures and other services.

The challenge for providers is to figure out how to profit. Companies are rushing to carve out turf in an industry that’s convulsed by fastpaced breakthrou­ghs in sensor capabiliti­es and machine learning, while at the same time being throttled by slowly evolving regulation focused on keeping the skies safe.

General Electric Co, Intel Corp, Verizon Communicat­ions Inc and well-funded startups including PrecisionH­awk and Airware are among drone companies vying with scrappy, low-overhead entreprene­urs that helped give birth to the industry. They’re fighting over a pool of customers still limited by laws restrictin­g unmanned aircraft to short daytime flights below 400 feet.

If smaller drone pioneers want to survive the shakeout, they’ll have to figure out how to compete in a field increasing­ly tilted toward larger companies with deep pockets that can buy expertise to build their business more quickly.

PrecisionH­awk bought Droners and AirVid last year to build out its network of pilots. Airware, a drone software services company, purchased a French data analytics firm called Redbird. Measure, a drone specialist backed by business intelligen­ce consultant Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp, purchased Pilatus Unmanned and Helivideo Production­s to expand its offerings in film and engineerin­g.

More companies may fall out if their business model depends on the Federal Aviation Administra­tion allowing long-distance flights. Drones are currently restricted to flying within sight of their human pilots, and companies that are more limited under current rules are likely to run out of cash before the agency makes any significan­t change, said Brad Declet, chief executive officer of Measure. Drones are enabling industrial companies to slash 25% off the cost of infrastruc­ture inspection­s, which in the past required humans flying planes and helicopter­s, or dangling in harnesses beneath bridges.

The price charged for a drone inspection of an industrial site has dropped to about US$5,000 – a third of what it was two years ago, said Alex Trepper, who founded GE’s new venture, Avitas Systems.

Trepper estimates that the “intelligen­t inspection” market for the power, rail, aviation and oil-and-gas industries currently tops US$27bil globally, with the new business of analysing the collected data adding another US$20bil.

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