Weekend Herald

Drones: Growing danger around airports

- David Koenig

The ability of drones to interfere with airliners — and inconvenie­nce their passengers — has now been demonstrat­ed on two continents, and the problem is likely to get worse as the number of small, unmanned devices multiply.

Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s are trying to figure out who flew a drone so high and so close to New Jersey’s Newark Liberty Internatio­nal Airport that incoming flights were held up briefly during a peak hour at one of the nation’s busiest airports.

Flights resumed within about 30 minutes — much more quickly than after a similar incident last month at London’s Gatwick Airport.

Here’s a look at what we know about these incidents and the likely impact of drones in the future:

What happened in New Jersey?

The pilots of both a Southwest Airlines flight and a United Airlines flight reported seeing a drone around 1000m above Teterboro, New Jersey, about 15km from the Newark airport, on Wednesday.

As a precaution, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion held up 43 flights already in the air and bound for Newark; nine landed instead at other airports. Another 170 Newark-bound planes were briefly delayed on the ground before taking off from other airports around the country.

No video of the reported drone has surfaced.

Who was operating the drone?

Authoritie­s have not determined that. The FAA alerted New Jersey State Police and the FBI.

Can we be sure there was a drone?

Some drone operators are sceptical about a drone reported at 1000m and whether pilots in a fast-moving jet could accurately identify such a tiny object.

Vic Moss, a founder of Drone U, a drone-operator school based in Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico, said many consumer drones are restricted from going that high, although homebuilt devices or older drones are not. There are, however, videos online showing drones at such altitudes.

“It’s possible, but it’s just incredibly unlikely that it was an actual drone,” Moss said. “Drones are the new UFO.”

What happened in London?

In mid-December, hundreds of flights were cancelled and more than 100,000 people were stranded or delayed over two days after reports of drones spotted near the runway at Gatwick Airport, a major internatio­nal hub.

A few days later, police arrested two men living near the airport but later cleared them, and no other suspects have been identified. Police also said two drones found near the airport were not involved in the disruption.

A few weeks later, a reported drone sighting briefly halted flights departing from London’s Heathrow Airport, one of the world’s busiest.

Why is this happening?

If the intrusions in New Jersey and London were deliberate, the motives are not clear. Officials in London said there was no indication that the Gatwick incident was terror-related. A criminal investigat­ion has been opened into the Heathrow incident.

What are the laws about flying drones near airports?

Federal rules in the US forbid operating a drone within 8km of most airports or above 120m without a waiver from the FAA.

Are drone manufactur­ers responsibl­e?

Devices from the biggest maker of consumer drones, DJI, include socalled geofencing — technology designed to prevent the aircraft from taking off near an airport. A drone that is launched properly but enters a no-fly zone will hover at the edge of the zone, according to a DJI spokesman.

Owners say DJI can take days to unlock no-fly restrictio­ns around even small airports. But DJI says those requests now are automated and handled quickly.

However, many drones offered for sale don’t include such restrictio­ns: They have no GPS or geofencing. Can operators disable safety systems?

Yes. There are online discussion­s in which drone operators talk about hacks. “The geofences [from manufactur­ers like DJI] are in place, but in some cases they can be defeated — it’s not easy,” said Tom Kilpatrick, a drone pilot who founded a drone company in Oklahoma. Home-built drones would likely not have those same safety features.

What’s being done to prevent drones from interferin­g?

DJI says it has developed technology to track nearby drones — their flight path and the operator’s location — using mobile, ground-based units.

The technology is currently only used to identify other DJI drones.

What are airports doing?

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the Newark airport, said agency officials met last week with counterpar­ts from the FAA, FBI and Homeland Security Department “to review and enhance protocols for the rapid detection and interdicti­on of drones”.

After the Gatwick incident, British officials said they have deployed drone-defence equipment at other UK airports but gave few details.

Are tougher rules in the works?

Late last year, Congress gave the Homeland Security and Justice department­s authority to develop and deploy a system to identify drones and disable — even destroy — drones considered a threat. Any such system has to be designed so that it doesn’t interfere with planes’ navigation equipment.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? As drones grow in popularity, they also risk becoming a greater danger.
Photo / AP As drones grow in popularity, they also risk becoming a greater danger.

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