Congress Orders FAA to Integrate Drones into National Airspace by 2015
Barack Obama has the ability to order the assassination of a U.S. citizen on U.S. soil.
Drones: A Booming Business?:
Unmanned aerial vehicles, also known as drones, may soon become
commercialized. In Grand Forks, N.D., people are preparing for a coming
boom in drones-related business.
March 17, 2013
New York Times -
On the pilot’s computer screen, planted at ground
level a few yards from the airport runway here, the data streaming
across the display tracked an airplane at 1,300 feet above a small city
on the coast, making perfect circles at 150 miles per hour.
To the pilot’s right, a sensor operator was aiming a camera on the plane
to pan, tilt and zoom in a search among the houses on the ground for
people who had been reported missing.
On his screen, cartoonlike human figures appeared in a gathering around a camp fire between the houses.
“There they are,” Andrew Regenhard, the pilot and a student, said in a
flat tone that seemed out of place with a successful rescue mission.
In fact, no one was missing; the entire exercise used imaginary props
and locales. Mr. Regenhard was taking part in a training session at the
University of North Dakota. The first to offer a degree program in
unmanned aviation, the university is one of many academic settings,
along with companies and individuals, preparing for a brave new world in
which cheap remote-controlled airplanes will be ubiquitous in civilian
air space, searching for everything from the most wanted of criminal
suspects to a swarm of grasshoppers devouring a crop.
“The sky’s going to be dark with these things,” said Chris Anderson, the
former editor of Wired,
who started the hobbyist Web site DIY Drones
and now runs a company, 3D Robotics, that sells unmanned aerial
vehicles and equipment.
He says it is selling about as many drones every
calendar quarter — about 7,500 — as the United States military flies in
total.
The burst of activity in remotely operated planes stems from the
confluence of two factors: electronics and communications gear
has
become dirt cheap, enabling the conversion of hobbyist radio-controlled
planes into sophisticated platforms for surveillance, and
the Federal Aviation Administration has been ordered by Congress to work out a way to integrate these aircraft into the national airspace by 2015.
The rapidly expanding market has not gone unnoticed by lawmakers and
privacy watchdogs. On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee will
hold a hearing on the privacy implications of drones like the ones being
developed at Grand Forks.
Senator Patrick Leahy, the Vermont Democrat who is chairman of the
committee, said this year:
“This fast-emerging technology is cheap and
could pose a significant threat to the privacy and civil liberties of
millions of Americans. It is another example of a fast-changing policy
area on which we need to focus to make sure that modern technology is
not used to erode Americans’ right to privacy.”
Some fans of the technology wince at the word “drone,” which implies
that there is no pilot. And they have grown resentful about the alarms
raised over privacy issues, noting that a few city and state governments
have
begun banning drones even where they do not yet operate.
Tom K. Kenville, chairman of the North Dakota chapter of the trade
association, Unmanned Applications Institute, International, said such
bans would discourage technological progress.
“I don’t think we had
rules for the road before we had roads,” he said.
Back in the university lab, Rico Becker, a software developer with
Corsair Engineering, which had written a program for the students,
emphasized that the “missing persons” exercise was just one of many
hypothetical missions that students would fly, and was purely
theoretical.
“We’re not training pilots to spot people camping in their
backyards,” he said.
Aside from the missing persons mission, experts here outline a number of
uses for the planes: “precision agriculture,” with tiny planes
inspecting crops several times a week for the first sign of blight or
insect invasion; safety missions by semiautonomous flying machines that
could cruise the two-mile length of a freight train and examine the air
brakes on each car, far faster than a person could, and be available for
accident assessment in case of derailment; inspection operations of
pipelines or power lines, a job that is notoriously dangerous for
helicopters, and scouting out fires or car crashes.
Volunteer fire departments in places like Grand Forks, Mr. Kenville
said, would provide a clear market. An unmanned vehicle, he said, was
“going to beat all the cars there,” to determine the scope of a problem.
“If it’s a chemical fire, it will tell us to stay away, or it’s just some hay bales, drive slower,” he said.
Remote control equipment might even displace some human pilots, in the cockpits of cargo planes.