Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Wait to fly drones grows longer

- Faizan Haidar faizan.haider@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: India’s civil aviation ministry has pushed back to April the date on which individual­s and companies will be able to fly drones under the regulation­s for use of Remotely Piloted Aircraft System (RPAS) released last August.

According to two officials familiar with the matter, the original launch date of January 1, 2019 for flying drones in areas other than those barred for security concerns, had to be revised for two reasons: states have yet to map “no-drone zones” in their airspace; and drones are not equipped with No Permission No Take-off (NPNT) hardware preprogram­med with no-fly zones and integrated with the Digital Sky Platform. Both are mandatory under RPAS rules.

Operators will be able to apply for permission­s and get instant approvals through the Digital Sky Platform, an online portal, for the use of drones for photograph­y, recreation­al purposes as well as for commercial use as taxis or delivery vehicles and other services. This will be the first-of-its-kind national unmanned traffic management (UTM) portal to implement a NPNT policy.

One of the officials quoted above said states had sought time at least till April 1 to map no-drone zones.

Likewise, manufactur­ers have sought more time to retrofit drones with NPNT hardware. Only after this is done can individual­s or companies register their drones with the government and be allotted unique identifica­tion numbers.

“Retrofitti­ng certified regulatory flight module hardware (RFMH) adapted from the ministry of road transport and highways’ AIS 140 system and integratin­g them to Digital Sky is an easy way to on-board existing drones to Digital Sky . These RFMH can be pre-programmed with currently known no-fly zones and can be updated with newer ones as they are notified by state government­s,” said Sai Pattabiram, founder and CEO of Sree Sai Aerotech Innovation­s Private Limited.

Earlier this week, civil avia- tion secretary RN Choubey said, “States have asked for more time to define no-drone zones. Accordingl­y the Digital Sky Platform will be updated. Drones that are fully compliant will be allowed to operate once no-drone zones are finalised.”

Users will be required to do a one-time registrati­on of drones, pilots and owners. For every flight (except nano drones, which weigh less than 250 gms), users will be required to ask for permission to fly through a mobile app, and an automated process will permit or deny the request instantly. The UTM (unmanned traffic management) operates as a traffic regulator in the drone airspace and coordinate­s closely with the defence and civilian air traffic controller­s (ATCs) to ensure that drones remain on the approved flight paths, according to RPAS guidelines

For flying in controlled airspace, the filing of flight plan and obtaining AirDefence Clearance (ADC) /Flight Informatio­n Centre (FIC) number will be necessary. The regulation defines no-drone zones as areas around airports, near the internatio­nal border, Vijay Chowk in New Delhi, state secretaria­t complexes in state capitals, and strategic locations and vital military installati­ons. A case under the Indian Penal Code can be filed for flying a drone in a prohibited zone.

 ?? REUTERS ?? States sought time till April 1 to ▪ map no-drone zones and manufactur­ers have asked for more time to retrofit drone with certified hardware
REUTERS States sought time till April 1 to ▪ map no-drone zones and manufactur­ers have asked for more time to retrofit drone with certified hardware

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