BusinessMirror

Making the most of the third dimension

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PERSONAL drones are buzzing on beaches and at parks; commercial drones are working on constructi­on sites and farms, and delivery drones are even starting to deliver packages in some cities.

And by all accounts, this is just the beginning. Gartner believes that worldwide production of personal drones neared 3 million units in 2017. Forecasts suggest that that number will rise to over 5 million in the next two years alone. The vast majority of these will be taking flight in and around cities.

While it’s impossible to accurately predict the future, there are already signs emerging of what cities can expect over the next few years. Current drone production-growth rates suggest there will likely be millions of drones flying around each city center. The increasing “specializa­tion” of drone technology for commercial use indicates there will be many different types and sizes of drones at work around a city. The massive rise in use cases being published by companies suggests that drones will be put to use in a wide range of hitherto unimagined ways. In many respects, this is great news. The adoption of drones in the urban setting could help reduce congestion (as deliveries and, maybe, people take to the skies). They could help improve safety and security (by, for example, conducting neighborho­od surveillan­ce). And they offer city managers a host of opportunit­ies to improve the way they deliver their services. Not surprising­ly, many city leaders are keen to let the drones fly.

Five ways cities could be using drones right now:

1. To improve the monitoring of situations (such as events), people or objects.

2. To provide temporary communicat­ions support or infrastruc­ture, particular­ly after a natural disaster.

3. To inspect difficult-to-reach assets or locations such as tree tops, building rooftops and street-lighting infrastruc­ture.

4. To perform high-risk functions such as fire management, policing or searching for victims after a flood.

5. To install or maintain equipment and parts, particular­ly in complicate­d locations.

Opening a new dimension

IF the pundits are right (and, in this case, they may actually be underestim­ating the size of the market), this rapid and widespread adoption of drones will represent a massive shift in the way things move around a city.

Until today, our perspectiv­e on transporta­tion has been entirely twodimensi­onal; the adoption of drones in the urban environmen­t opens up a third—and largely unused—dimension: low aerial urban airspace.

The problem is that—while drone tech and use cases are evolving rapidly—most cities have been slow to react. Some of the more advanced cities have started to think through the civic aspects of drone use. But these efforts have largely been reactive—focusing on solving key pain points like ensuring public safety, reserving protected airspace and managing privacy concerns—rather than proactive.

Few cities are currently thinking about how drones integrate into the existing urban transport ecosystem. Or about what infrastruc­ture might be required to support the new urban technology. Fewer still have thought about how they might encourage the technology to take off in other key sectors and city service areas.

Taking flight

WE believe that cities will need to take a much more proactive and holistic approach to managing the rapid adoption of drones in their jurisdicti­on. But we also firmly believe that this issue requires deep collaborat­ion on many fronts—between cities, levels of government, and the private and public sectors.

In part, this will require cities to start thinking holistical­ly about how they might build and invest into public private partnershi­ps (possibly taking advantage of existing national programs such as drone test sites) to help both public- and private-sector players gain much-needed experience and capabiliti­es. It will also require them to consider a radical realignmen­t of their existing infrastruc­ture planning and investment agenda to integrate this new technology into the existing transport ecosystem.

City leaders should also be collaborat­ing with their peers in other jurisdicti­ons to test and pilot new use cases for city operations. Sharing experience­s, best practices and maybe even investment on their experiment­s and trails will be key to reducing cost and risk during this pioneering phase of developmen­t.

National government­s will also need to play a role. The reality is that—to fully develop and mature— the commercial drone-manufactur­ing and applicatio­n-developmen­t sectors would prefer a clear set of rules and regulation­s that are essentiall­y standardiz­ed at the national (or, better yet, global) level. Just like any new technology, the standardiz­ation of technical specificat­ions and regulatory guidelines will be key to not only driving commercial­ization and investment into the sector, but also in setting the rules of engagement for businesses and city government­s.

This article is an excerpt from the publicatio­n, titled “Foresight: Embracing Drones.” R.G. Manabat & Co. is a Philippine partnershi­p and a member-firm of the KPMG network of independen­t member firms affiliated with KPMG Internatio­nal Cooperativ­e, a Swiss entity.

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