The Daily Telegraph

Drone number plates to help tackle ‘Wild West’ in the sky

- By Charles Hymas and Tony Diver

DRONES will be forced to have electronic number plates so they can be tracked by police and the security services under plans being drawn up by regulators and the Government.

Drones would be equipped with “remote ID” technology, enabling their speed, location, height, user’s location and take-off point to be tracked.

It comes as concern grows in Government that the registrati­on scheme for the UK’S 300,000 drone users lacks the technologi­cal back-up for it to be properly enforced. One source compared the situation to “the Wild West”.

With 900,000 commercial drones alone predicted in the next five years, ministers want an aerial equivalent of the automatic number plate recognitio­n network of cameras for cars, vans and lorries which enables police and local authoritie­s to identify law-breaking drivers. The US has already legislated for a system, set to go live in September.

The Civil Aviation Authority has commission­ed Swiss firm Murzilli Consulting to “develop a strategy for any future remote ID requiremen­t for UK drone and remotely piloted services”.

It is understood officials are working towards a deadline of April 1 2026 to get a remote ID system running in the UK. The plans are due to be announced in March this year.

The move comes as the Government prepares to spend £8 million deploying anti-drone detectors around nuclear plants, transport hubs, oil rigs and other sensitive infrastruc­ture across the UK to protect from aerial terrorist attacks.

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