Dayton Daily News

Interior Department grounds its drone fleet

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy and Alan Levin

has grown heavily reliant on drones to monitor hundreds of millions of acres of public lands, employing the devices to help respond to natural disasters as well as survey dams and other critical infrastruc­ture.

The ban comes as the Trump administra­tion moves to curtail the government’s use of Chinese drones. The U.S. military is already paring its purchases and the Homeland Security Department warned last year that the devices can transmit sensitive data and video to third parties. The Trump administra­tion also has sought to block other Chinese technology and unsuccessf­ully lobbied the European Union to ban Huawei Technologi­es Co. and other Chinese 5G suppliers.

SZ D JI Technology Co., the China-based company that is the world’s largest civilian drone maker, blasted the Interior Department’s move, saying a technology’s country of origin shouldn’t be used “as a litmus test for its performanc­e, security and reliabilit­y.”

“This decision makes clear that the U.S. government’s concerns about D JI drones, which are part of the DOI fleet, have little to do with security and are instead part of a politicall­y motivated agenda to reduce market competitio­n and support domestical­ly produced drone technology, regardless of its merits,” the company said in an emailed statement.

The company added that the security of their products has been independen­tly tested and validated by U.S. cybersecur­ity consultant­s, U.S. federal agencies, “which proves today’s decision has nothing to do with security.”

The Interior Department conducted about 10,000 flights last year, with about half used for training.

“Interior drones for non-emergency operations will remain grounded while the Interior Department reviews the possibilit­y of potential threats and ensures a secure, reliable and consistent drone policy that advances our mission while keeping America safe,” the agency said in an emailed statement. “We must ensure that the technology used for these operations is such that it will not compromise our national security interests.”

The Interior Department will still make exceptions for emergency purposes, such as search and rescue operations and fighting wildfires — when the drones are able to keep flying in conditions that ground helicopter­s and planes. The agency has made exceptions for at least 12 drone flights to assist in fire and flood response efforts since restrictio­ns were first temporaril­y adopted by the department last October.

China dominates global drone manufactur­ing, and the U.S. government has relatively few options for sourcing the equipment domestical­ly. President Donald Trump warned about a shortfall in domestic manufactur­ing of small drones in a directive last June that mandated the Pentagon expand its drone production capability.

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