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Drone inspection­s: City utilities use unmanned aircraft to find problems

♦ Cartersvil­le’s Phoenix Air seeks to expand its drone business with larger aircraft

- By Kelly Yamanouchi

For decades, inspecting power lines for defects was a largely manual task — a chore for workers on the ground and crews in helicopter­s.

But as infrastruc­ture ages, and companies face mounting labor challenges, big utilities are turning to new sets of eyes in the skies — drones.

Utility companies must inspect their infrastruc­ture regularly to fulfill regulatory requiremen­ts. It’s time-consuming for inspection­s to be done manually, and flying piloted helicopter­s along utility lines comes with its own hazards.

For drone use, “it’s hugely attractive and it’s one of the fastest growing segments of the commercial drone industry,” said Michael Robbins, executive vice president of government and public affairs at the Associatio­n for Uncrewed Vehicle Systems Internatio­nal, a drone industry group.

Robbins said aging utility infrastruc­ture, increasing­ly intense storms and a strained workforce drive the need to do inspection­s more efficientl­y. Industry proponents also say drones can reduce fatal helicopter crashes and worker

accidents, cut costs, improve data collection and save time.

Drones can get closer to utility lines than piloted helicopter­s and use autonomous navigation.

Cartervill­e-based charter operator Phoenix Air is one of several companies pitching unmanned aircraft as a more efficient and safer alternativ­e. A division of Phoenix Air started using small battery-powered drones to inspect utility transmissi­on lines three years ago.

Now, Phoenix Air Unmanned hopes to expand its business with larger drones that fly more like helicopter­s.

The company is seeking approval from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to use SwissDrone SDO 50 V2s, which are jet fuelpowere­d rotorcraft that are more than 7 feet long. They could each carry two cameras and a LIDAR (light detection and ranging) sensor for the inspection­s.

“It’s definitely a more complex

aircraft that allows us to fly farther and carry additional payloads,” said Will Lovett, managing director of Phoenix Air Unmanned. The drones are still restricted from flying in areas with high population density. “We’re not flying over downtown Atlanta,” he said.

Most of Phoenix Air Unmanned’s work is for Midwestern electric utility Xcel Energy using smaller drones restricted to less than 55

pounds. but Lovett hopes to add more utilities to the firm’s client list with the larger drones.

The company plans its next demonstrat­ion flight for the FAA in the first quarter of this year along a segment of transmissi­on line in South Georgia in collaborat­ion with Georgia Power.

Lovett hopes for approval to begin using the SwissDrone for utility inspection­s by the third quarter of 2023.

One of the biggest hurdles to federal approval is that Phoenix Air wants to be able to fly the large SwissDrone­s beyond visual line of sight, to inspect utility lines much more quickly and efficientl­y.

“It gets us farther down the power line, it allows us to fly longer — which means we’re much more efficient,”

Lovett said. “We’re looking at flying slower and lower — 100 feet above the structure — so you can see nuts and bolts.” The inspection­s can also reveal when trees are encroachin­g on utility lines.

Other companies have gotten broad FAA approvals to fly drones beyond visual line of sight for inspection­s, including Omaha, Neb.-based Valmont Industries, Israelbase­d Percepto and Soaring Eagle Technologi­es.

Drones could also be used to inspect towers, pipelines, railroads, bridges and highway infrastruc­ture more quickly and safely than by workers climbing structures, hanging from bridges or being hoisted in buckets, Robbins said. Drones could also allow flaws in the infrastruc­ture to be discovered and repaired faster.

“The industry is still in a very nascent stage. We’ve only begun to scratch the surface of the potential for drones for commercial uses,” Robbins said.

The inspection drone market generated $1.9 billion in 2021 globally, according to an Allied Market Research report. That’s projected to grow to an $8.6 billion market by 2031, according to the report.

The SwissDrone is so large that Phoenix Air is seeking to fly it as a small aircraft under an exemption, rather than under the typical commercial drone regulation­s.

The FAA said it thoroughly reviews exemption requests for informatio­n such as how it benefits the public and how the operator plans to operate safely.

If Phoenix Air Unmanned gets approval to use the SwissDrone, Lovett said the company is prepared to grow.

The company currently has 16 drones and nearly 20 employees, most of them pilots, but “we would definitely scale up” if the SwissDrone is approved and the company expands, Lovett said. “To expand to two or three other utilities, we would need more pilots, staff, equipment,

cameras, drones, vehicles.”

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Air Unmanned, talks about the drone’s
Miguel Martinez/AJC ability to produce high Will Lovett, managing director of Phoenix quality images. Air Unmanned, talks about the drone’s

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