The long-awaited draft rules from the Federal Aviation
Administration would require unmanned aircraft pilots to obtain
special pilot certificates, stay away from bystanders and fly only
during the day. They limit flying speed to 100 miles per hour (160
kph) and the altitude to 500 feet (152 meters) above ground level.
The rules also say pilots must remain in the line of sight of its
radio-control drone, which could limit inspection of pipelines,
crops, and electrical towers that are one of the major uses
envisioned by companies.
The FAA acknowledged the limitation but said those flights could be
made possible with a secondary spotter working with the pilot of the
drone.
"This rule does not deal with beyond line of sight, but does allow
for the use of a visual observer to augment line of sight by the
operator of the unmanned aircraft," FAA Administrator Michael Huerta
said in a conference call with reporters on Sunday.
The draft rules, nearly 10 years in the making, still must undergo
public comment and revision before becoming final, a process
expected to take at least a year.
If they survive in their current form, they would be unlikely to
help Amazon.com in its quest to eventually deliver packages with
unmanned drones, since they require an FAA-certified small drone
pilot to fly the aircraft and keep it in line of sight at all times
- factors not envisioned in the online retailer's plan.
Huerta also said, "We don't consider or contemplate in this rule
carrying packages outside of the aircraft itself."
Amazon's vice president of global public policy, Paul Misener, said
the proposal would bar the company's delivery drones in the United
States. Misener also urged the FAA to address the needs of Amazon
and its customers as it carried out its formal rulemaking process.
"We are committed to realizing our vision ... and are prepared to
deploy where we have the regulatory support we need," Misener said
in an emailed statement.
Other countries have taken a more permissive stance towards delivery
drones. In September, logistics firm DHL said its use of drones to
drop off packages to residents of a German island was the first such
authorized flight in Europe.
"The United States cannot afford to lag behind other countries in
technological innovation because of regulatory foot-dragging," U.S.
Senator Cory Booker, a New Jersey Democrat, said in an emailed
statement.
RULES EXPECTED TO EVOLVE
Huerta, who said the agency had tried to be "flexible" in writing
the rules, said they set a framework and would evolve based on
discussions with industry and technology developments.
The rules continue current restrictions against filming of crowds by
news organizations, but Huerta said he expected those procedures to
be developed as part of discussions with news groups.
[to top of second column] |
Separately, President Barack Obama issued a memo outlining
principles for government use of drones, covering such issues as
privacy protections and oversight of federal drone use.
The FAA's draft rules appeared less onerous in some aspects than the
industry had been worried about. There had been concern, for
example, that they would require drone operators to attend a
flight-training school and obtain a certification similar to that of
a manned aircraft pilot.
Commercial drone operators would need to be at least 17 years old,
pass an aeronautical knowledge test and be vetted by the
Transportation Security Administration. But they would not need to
undergo the medical tests or flight hours required of manned
aircraft pilots.
"I am very pleased to see a much more reasonable approach to future
regulation than many feared," said Brendan Schulman, a lawyer who
works on drone issues at Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel in New
York.
The proposal would benefit U.S. farmers and ranchers as it would
enable them to scout fields more efficiently, said R.J. Karney,
director of Congressional relations at the American Farm Bureau
Federation.
The Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI),
also praised the draft. The group's president, Brian Wynne, called
it a "good first step in an evolutionary process."
But privacy advocates were concerned there were not enough limits on
when law enforcement agencies would be permitted to use drones for
surveillance.
The proposal "allows the use of data gathered by domestic drones for
any 'authorized purpose', which is not defined, leaving the door
open to inappropriate drone use by federal agencies," said Neema
Singh Guliani, legislative counsel at the Washington legislative
office of the American Civil Liberties Union, in an emailed
statement.
(The story was refiled to change "pilot" to "drone" in the third
paragraph)
(Additional reporting by Lucia Mutikani and Susan Cornwell in
Washington and Peter Rudegeair in New York; Editing by Mark
Heinrich, Nick Zieminski and Frances Kerry)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |