In News
- The Ministry of Civil Aviation has notified a traffic management policy framework for drones.
- It envisages private, third-party service providers for ensuring safe operations.
- The framework has been issued under the Drone Rules 2021.
About the Framework
- Established Unmanned Traffic Management Service Providers(UTMSP):
- It will extend automated, algorithm-driven software services instead of voice communication as in the traditional Air Traffic Management (ATM) systems.
- It will be responsible for segregating and separating a drone from other drones and manned aircraft in the airspace below 1,000 feet in the country.
- Integration of UTMSP and ATM:
- So that flight plans and real-time location of manned aircraft can be recorded as well in order to continuously separate manned and unmanned aircraft from each other.
- Supplementary Service Providers(SSPs):
- The traffic management providers will be assisted by SSPs.
- It will maintain data about
- the terrain,
- Weather,
- location of manned aircraft and
- It would also provide services such as insurance, data analytics and drone fleet management.
- Access to Law Enforcement Agencies:
- Law enforcement and security agencies will have access to some information in the UTM ecosystem on a need-to-know basis.
- Service Fee:
- UTMSPs would levy a service fee on users
- A small portion of which will also be shared with the Airports Authority of India.
- Geographic Presence:
- UTMSPs will be deployed in small areas to begin with and their geographic presence may be increased subsequently.
- Public and Private Players:
- The framework allows both public and private third-party service providers to manage unmanned aerial vehicles in lower airspace.
- The government will carry out UTM-based experiments in the country and then float a request for proposal for onboarding UTMSPs.
- Following which an evaluation process will be undertaken
- Thereafter , successful participants will be awarded regions for establishment of UTM services.
Why a separate framework for drones?
- It has become important to safely manage both manned and unmanned aircraft, particularly at low-level airspace where the drones fly.
- Increasing number of drones:
- The number of drones being used in India is all set to increase after the latest liberalized drone regulations.
- Inefficiency of design in current systems:
- Current air traffic management (ATM) systems have not been designed to handle the traffic from unmanned aircraft.
- Scaling up:
- Traditional traffic management services provided by Air Traffic Controllers for manned aircraft cannot be scaled for managing drone traffic
- Which is expected to become at least 100 times higher
- Since the traditional ATM is manual and requires human intervention.
- Traditional traffic management services provided by Air Traffic Controllers for manned aircraft cannot be scaled for managing drone traffic
- Integration would be cost ineffective:
- Integration of unmanned aircraft in the Indian airspace using conventional means
- may require unmanned aircraft to be equipped with bulky and expensive hardware, which is neither feasible nor advisable
- Integration of unmanned aircraft in the Indian airspace using conventional means
- Security concerns:
- Drones being used to drop explosive devices, triggering blasts inside the Air Force Station’s technical area in Jammu.
- Pakistan is regularly deploying drones over the past two years to smuggle arms, ammunition and drugs into Indian territory.
- Rapidly proliferating drone technology and exponential growth of its global market, the possibility of a drone attack cannot be ruled out.
- Recently, Iranian drones were apparently used in a strike on an oil tanker operated by an Israeli-owned company.
Drone management in India
|
Source: TH
Previous article
National Targets to Limit Global Warming
Next article
China to build a military base in Tajikistan