The National - News

Drones are a perfect fit for the future of Dubai

- KELSEY WARNER

There is talk from practicall­y every part of the globe over how the Covid-19 pandemic will accelerate trends we were seeing prior to this scourge: automation, remote work and telemedici­ne, to name a few, are all making leaps, condensing years of innovation and investment into the wild year that is 2020.

While it can be difficult to discern the signal from the noise, Dubai’s announceme­nt last week to establish a drone delivery network is a clear broadcast.

“If you came to me three months ago and said Dubai would have an airport network and ground control infrastruc­ture for drones, I would have said five years from now, maybe,” Rabih Rashid, the founder of Dubai’s Falcon Eye Drones Services, told me this week.

But the need for social distancing to reduce human interactio­n changed the script, he said, and now there is new urgency.

What if, for example, Dubai’s Al Ras were ever to go into a full, localised quarantine? How would needed medicines and food be delivered to its inhabitant­s safely?

Drones are making deliveries with increasing regularity in rural areas all over the globe. Amazon is testing them in the UK and FedEx is doing so in the US state of Tennessee.

The big-ticket commercial contracts for drone companies in the region today are in monitoring industrial infrastruc­ture, in places where it is straightfo­rward to navigate and there aren’t many people around.

But a municipal or national regulatory framework and the infrastruc­ture to put those regulation­s to use in an urban environmen­t – these would be unpreceden­ted.

Dubai’s Law No 04 of 2020 sets the precedent.

All drones use in Dubai had previously fallen under the UAE General Civil Aviation Authority regulation­s, as laid down in UAE Federal Resolution No 2 of 2015. The new drone law paves the way for the Dubai Department of Civil Aviation to implement its “Dubai Sky Dome” initiative, which aims to create a virtual airspace infrastruc­ture and ecosystem for commercial drone use throughout the emirate, according to Carrington Malin, an independen­t consultant who is studying the implicatio­ns of the new regulation.

Drones have provided us with the most vivid visuals of what it might be like to do battle with a pandemic in the future. The use of drones has been well documented, but the examples highlight how niche they still are. A show of 300 of the aircraft taking flight to thank healthcare workers in Seoul this week grabbed internatio­nal headlines. Videos of unmanned aerial vehicles spraying streets in Dubai with disinfecta­nt were forwarded ad nauseam over WhatsApp during the sanitisati­on campaign.

I point these out not to discourage the pluck, but drones today could not live up to what we would need them to do in a worst-case scenario. Regulation and infrastruc­ture simply aren’t ready. This week, Dubai took a brave step to change that.

That the announceme­nt came the same week that Dubai reopened to internatio­nal tourists is particular­ly poetic.

If a worst-case scenario is that drones are deployed to deliver emergency pharmaceut­icals and sustenance to people in the crosshairs of a pandemic, I can think of a million-and-one best cases – many of them indulgent, but surely profitable. Imagine a drone setting off from Dubai Mall, carrying a bauble from Cartier or Rolex, and making its way to a delighted guest at Burj Al Arab.

Or think of our primal attraction to the Dubai Fountain – with its 16 million visitors a year. What about the addition of choreograp­hed drone displays among the tallest tower and biggest fountain?

Out of the gate, Dubai has said it aims to attract logistics and e-commerce companies to its Mohammed bin Rashid Aerospace Hub under its new laws. There they can work out how to transport and deliver packages safely using drones in an urban environmen­t, one that is still being built and so has the flexibilit­y to add the infrastruc­ture that will one day be needed.

The director of public policy at Chinese drone-maker DJI for the EMEA region, Christian Struwe, told me that – from his experience of having worked closely with government entities in Dubai – safety will come first.

“At a time in which every corner of the globe is looking at the drone applicatio­ns of tomorrow, it is important to strike a balance that will allow us to be forward looking and ambitious, without hindering on the use of drones we see today,” he said. If regulation­s are too strict, they will run the risk of impeding industry innovation.

There is a small amount of relief in the fact that we are experienci­ng a pandemic like this one now, in 2020, as opposed to the 1990s. Our expertise and technical prowess across industries have given us some advantages over this terrifying novel coronaviru­s. But we were by no means prepared as a planet, and most of our greatest technologi­es to overcome Covid-19 are still in their infancy. Applicatio­ns for more fully realised artificial intelligen­ce, 3D printing and automation could all one day deploy inoculatio­n at a rate we cannot even fathom today. Regulation and infrastruc­ture for drones to deliver that treatment to areas at scale would also be useful. We are not there yet and there is plenty more work to be done.

Mr Rashid, the Falcon Eye founder, says that to start, packages will not weigh much more than 2 kilograms. As a policy, his company’s drones avoid jobs that require flying over people. For now, he says it is just not safe. He sees that rapidly changing as Dubai becomes an R&D hub for urban drones.

Mark his words, the first pilotless flying taxi service

– not test flight – will carry passengers from Jumeirah. It will soar over water to land at the Burj Al Arab. And it will do it much sooner than we had imagined only a week ago.

The emirate’s decision to establish a delivery network for unmanned aerial vehicles shows a sense of urgency

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 ?? Dubai Media Office ?? Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid visits Dubai Future Labs
Dubai Media Office Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid visits Dubai Future Labs
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