SAM IS ....
CAA response to the Airspeeder Incident
Background: In July 2019 there was an incident involving an Alauda Airspeeder MKII unmanned aircraft at Goodwood Aerodrome, West Sussex, during a demonstration flight.  There were no fatalities or injuries, and the unmanned aircraft was destroyed.

The Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) investigated the accident, and the report can be found on the AAIB website. The CAA is required to formally respond to the AAIB within 70 days.


CAA UAS Unit action: The CAA UAS Unit has been and will continue to be committed to continuously improve as the UAS regulator. The Unit has already initiated several workstreams to address the safety recommendations in the report and significant progress has been made. 

The audit process had been reviewed and updated prior to this report, to ensure that there is suitable and appropriate oversight carried out. The team are finalising processes that will trigger additional on-site oversight based on the complexity of an operation or platform. There has been an upskilling within the team and recruitment of staff into the UAS Sector Team with specific operational and technical background in airworthiness and avionics, along with a policy to ensure the involvement of other capability areas is implemented where necessary. 

We will:
– Review application and authorisation processes for Specific category operations.
– Review oversight and audit processes.
– Review staff training and competency requirements.
– Review policy relating to Specific category operations.
– Review guidance in CAPs such as 722 and 722A. 

We will keep our key stakeholder forum and representative organisations updated on progress.
 

CAA

4 March 2021

SAM IS ....
Protected: Podcasts

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

SAM IS ....
Protected: Strategic Intelligence Reports

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

SAM IS ....
Protected: Learning Tools/Webinars

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

SAM IS ....
Protected: Emergency Services

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

SAM IS ....
Protected: Jobs and Contract Opportunities

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

SAM IS ....
Protected: Business Document Depository

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

SAM IS ....
Iprosurv secures Extended Visual line of sight permissions from the CAA

Iprosurv, the UK’s leading drone survey, inspection and mapping provider and ARPAS-UK Member, has secured Extended Visual Line of Sight permissions from the Civil Aviation Authority for its network of remote pilots.

Standard aviation regulations insist that drones remain within the pilot’s sight at all times during flight which has historically limited flight distances to around 500m.

However, Iprosurv’s new permissions allow its remote pilots to fly drones up to 2km from the launch site, with no direct line of sight required by the remote pilot.

The special permissions, issued by the CAA have so far been granted to less than 1% of the nation’s commercial drone operators, means that Iprosurv pilots can not only fly closer to the target site but can also fly further and for longer periods of time providing clients with a complete and instant overview of an area or building.

This is not the first time that Iprosurv has received exemptions to current flight restrictions having secured reduced site control distances in 2018.

“We are delighted that the CAA has once again recognised the high level of training, safety and monitoring that takes place across our network of remote pilots and has seen fit to provide us with these new permissions,” said Iprosurv co-founder and CEO, Rebecca Jones.

“What may seem like a technicality is actually a huge leap forward in the capabilities of drones, particularly in the early assessment of disaster areas, assisting the emergency services and in the survey of inaccessible buildings.

“These exemptions will allow us to stream footage and data direct to the client’s desktop even before a site has been physically visited.”

Currently, when faced with a large survey area, pilots often have to stop a flight once the limits of line of site have been reached, drive to the next launch site and start the process again. Iprosurv’s new level of functionality will allow insurers, property managers and the emergency services to view the entire area and assess and triage the situation in real time.

“Drones have always had the potential to completely change the way we respond to disasters or large-scale surveys but having the ability to remain in the air for longer, going further distances and relaying real time data back to the client is a huge step forward,” said Jones.

“In granting these permissions, the CAA has shown a welcome willingness to help unlock the commercial and societal benefits of drones and we look forward to introducing our new capabilities to all of our clients.”

Iprosurv currently has a core of pilots trained and ready to use the new permissions and will have the full network trained by Q4 this year.

24th August 2020

iprosurv.com

SAM IS ....
Protected: ARPAS-UK Magazines

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

SAM IS ....
Protected: Member Benefits

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below: