National Post (National Edition)

Stricter drone rules in works

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

New rules for drone operation in Canada are designed to help buck a growing global trend of incursions into space reserved for air travel, government officials said.

The tighter regulation­s would impose age limits, knowledge tests and registrati­on requiremen­ts on all drone operators and are set to come into effect in 2019.

“The number of reported incidents more than tripled from 38 when data collection began in 2014 to 135 last year,” Transport Canada said in a statement, adding the 2018 figure stood at 95 as of Nov. 30.

“This brings with it increasing threats to the safety of Canadian airspace and to the safety of people on the ground.”

Canada and several other countries already have rules in place mandating minimum distances between drones and airspace, with guidelines changing based on the size and classifica­tion of the drone.

Existing rules impose few limits on those wanting to fly drones weighing less than 35 kilograms for recreation­al purposes and no special permission­s are necessary, but Transport Canada offers some guidelines for safe operation.

These include flying drones less than 90 metres above the ground, staying at least 5.6 kilometres away from airports and 1.9 kilometres away from heliports.

Violating those rules, the agency said, could result in fines of up to $3,000.

Larger drones weighing more than 35 kilograms, or those used for research or work, currently require permission to operate via a Special Flight Operations Certificat­e.

Fines for violating those certificat­es range from up to $15,000 for individual­s to $25,000 for corporatio­ns, Transport Canada said.

Much of this would change under the proposed new rules, which would impose stricter limits on anyone planning to operate a drone weighing between 250 grams and 25 kilograms.

Rules would be particular­ly stringent for those operating in urban areas, near controlled airspace or close to airports.

Transport Canada is advising a minimum age of operation of 16 in those zones, and would-be pilots would also have to pass a written test, register their devices and affix government-issued registrati­on marks to the aircraft.

The agency said endangerin­g aircraft is a particular­ly serious offence that even now can carry additional

THIS BRINGS WITHIT INCREASING THREATS TO SAFETY.

fines of up to $25,000 or possible prison time.

One such event took place in October 2017 when a drone struck a plane as it was flying into an airport in Quebec City, causing minor damage to the aircraft.

Canada is not alone in documentin­g an increase of encroachme­nts into aviation space.

In the United States, there were nearly 2,300 drone sightings at airports in the year ending June 30, according to Federal Aviation Administra­tion records.

Runways have been temporaril­y closed, but an FAA spokesman said he could not recall drones ever leading to the shutdown of a U.S. airport.

“This has gone from being what a few years ago we would have called an emerging threat to a more active threat,” said Patrick Smith, who is an airline pilot.

“The hardware is getting bigger and heavier and potentiall­y more lethal, and so we need a way to control how these devices are used and under what rules.”

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