Manila Bulletin

IATA seeks strong law enforcemen­t to deter irresponsi­ble use of drones

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GENEVA (Reuters) – Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s must play a strong role to ensure there are suitable deterrents in place for those flying recreation­al drones to prevent danger to passenger aircraft, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) said.

Risks posed by the increasing use of drones were highlighte­d in October when a drone hit an aircraft landing at a Canadian airport and there have been several near-misses between drones and passenger planes in Europe.

"This is something we do not want to see continuing," Rob Eagles, director of air traffic management infrastruc­ture at IATA told journalist­s on Tuesday.

"We see a strong role for law enforcemen­t. One of the concerns we have is the unprofessi­onal operation of small recreation­al drones because people do not understand the risks they could have against manned aviation," he said.

As well as fines, the registrati­on of drone users and technology to prevent drones from straying into unauthoriz­ed areas could lessen the risk.

"There has to be an active deterrent so people understand the responsibi­lity they bear and the risks associated with irresponsi­ble use of small recreation­al drones," he said, adding that IATA was also seeking to raise awareness and educate users.

Airlines and cargo companies also see opportunit­ies from commercial drones, Celine Hourcade, head of cargo transforma­tion at IATA said. She highlighte­d examples such as for the last mile for small parcel deliveries, transporti­ng goods to remote or isolated areas and on routes which are not economical­ly viable for larger aircraft.

"It's not about replacing current aviation but complement­ing the fleet of current airlines or new entrants," she said, pointing to companies such as DHL, UPS, Amazon and Alibaba which are trialling drone deliveries.

Airlines and airports could also use drones to help inspect aircraft and runways or even bird-shaped drones to chase off wildlife, thus improving safety and reducing cost.

For example, using drones could make visual aircraft inspection­s 20 times faster. Typical inspection­s currently last 6 to 10 hours and cost airlines $10,000 for each hour the plane is on the ground, IATA said.

 ??  ?? Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) Director General and CEO Alexandre de Juniac speaks during the Global Media Day in Geneva, Switzerlan­d December 5, 2017. (Reuters)
Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) Director General and CEO Alexandre de Juniac speaks during the Global Media Day in Geneva, Switzerlan­d December 5, 2017. (Reuters)

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