FAA expands low-altitude drone tests

To support rapidly increasing commercial drone use, the FAA is set to expand testing of automated processing capabilities for operator authorizations.

By Diana Grytsku ID: 522127369
 

The Federal Aviation Administration will expand its test of a near-real-time drone authorization processing system beginning next month, and will add more mapping providers to the effort, the agency's acting administrator told a gathering of unmanned aircraft operators.

Acting Administrator Dan Elwell said at the agency's 3rd Annual UAS Symposium that starting at the end of April, the FAA will expand Low Altitude Authorization and Notification Capability into a nationwide beta test.

That test will include 300 air traffic control centers across the country, which serve 500 airports. The test begins April 30, and will look at how the automated processing system data sharing functions will work.

The FAA launched a prototype low-altitude test last fall at eight regional air traffic control facilities, as it accelerated plans to integrate drones into the national airspace.

FAA regulation requires unmanned system operators flying aircraft at lower altitudes in airspace controlled by an agency air traffic control facility to get formal permission before such operations.

In an Oct. 23 memo, President Donald Trump called for an UAS Integration Pilot Program to go live in 90 days to set test zones and build regulatory framework to get commercial drones, such as those that deliver medicine, inspect critical infrastructure, monitor emergencies and other applications into the U.S. airspace more effectively.

With the explosion of commercial drone technology and applications, the agency has been buried under a backlog of thousands of commercial applications. The effort fully automates that authorization process in near real-time, according to the FAA, which the agency said will "dramatically" decrease wait times compared to the manual process. Additionally, air traffic controllers would be able to actually see where drones have planned operations.

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