Daily Record

High speed drone in plane near miss at 3000 feet

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BY NEIL LANCEFIELD reporters@dailyrecor­d.co.uk A PLANE was involved in a near miss with a commercial drone near Glasgow Airport, it has been revealed.

The tail of the Loganair aircraft – which had 25 people on board – was inspected because the crew “thought it may have been hit” as it approached the airport, according to a report by the UK Airprox Board (UKAB).

The incident was rated as having the highest degree of risk. The near miss happened on November 24 last year when the plane was nine miles from the airport at an altitude of 3000 feet.

Loganair chief operations officer Maurice Boyle said: “Our Saab 2000 aircraft was carrying 22 passengers and three crew from Sumburgh in Shetland and was approachin­g Glasgow Airport when the captain and first officer both saw the drone in very close proximity.

“Fortunatel­y, there was no collision but this was potentiall­y a very serious incident.”

He added: “Penalties should be substantia­lly increased for flagrant misuse of drones near airports, where they represent a major hazard.”

The captain and first officer described the drone as dark or black and about one metre wide.

It passed about five metres above the captain’s window and was moving at “high speed” in a straight line.

The near miss was reported to air traffic control. Police met the crew after landing to file a report. The UKAB said “a definite risk of collision had existed”.

It was one of 11 near misses between an aircraft and a drone or unknown object analysed by the board in its latest monthly meeting.

Other cases involved flights landing or taking off in Perth, Belfast, Bristol, Hampshire, Liverpool and London.

There has been growing concern about drones after sightings of the devices caused flights to be grounded at Gatwick before Christmas.

Aviation Minister Liz Sugg said: “Flying drones illegally puts others at risk. The law is clear that these are serious criminal acts that hold lengthy prison sentences.

“The Government is further strengthen­ing the law by extending the no-fly zone around airports, and from November all drone users must be registered and tested – which will help hold illegal drone users to account.”

 ??  ?? LETHAL Drones likes this could put the lives of airline passengers at risk. Pic: AFP/Getty
LETHAL Drones likes this could put the lives of airline passengers at risk. Pic: AFP/Getty
 ??  ?? CRACKDOWN Liz Sugg
CRACKDOWN Liz Sugg

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