World ATM Congress Breaks Records ❙ 10 Percent Increase ❙ ❙ ❙
in Registration 8,542 Registrants 237 Exhibitors from 136 Countries and Territories!
2018 Highlights
NOW Madrid, Spain ❙ #WorldATM
With Flying Taxis Only Five Years Away, Autonomous Operations are a Key Challenge
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Klaus-Dieter Scheurle, DFS, answers questions during session two: Rising Upwards – The Growth and Challenges of Autonomous Operations in ATM.
isruptors and regulators shared the World ATM Congress stage on 6 March, discussing their different perspectives on the growth and challenges of drones and other autonomous operations on air traffic management (ATM). Moderator Nancy Graham, Graham Aerospace International, jokingly referred to the two panelists from the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) industry as disruptors, but the focus of the session was on transforming traditional air navigation service provider (ANSP) operations to accommodate the millions of semi-autonomous craft that are already in the worldwide airspace, or soon will be. One of those entrants is Uber Elevate. Dr. Tom Prevot, Director of Engineering for Uber Elevate’s Airspace Systems, showed a video of the US urban trans-
"Regulators have to be looking at a different way of learning. We’re not just ushering in the future; it’s happening now.” – Nancy Graham
port service, which is expected to be operational by 2023 in Dallas and Los Angeles. The goal is to eventually operate globally, he said. Uber Elevate’s vertical takeoff and landing aircraft look like large drones that can seat four people and a pilot. They’re designed to fly customers to and from skyports on the top of Continued on page 6
Navigating UTM from A to Z
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nmanned aviation system traffic management (UTM) is a concept like the internet—it's interoperable, with many stakeholders, users, and builders—said Jonathan Evans, president of the Global UTM Association (GUTMA), during the 8 March UTM Foundations session in the FABEC OPS Theatre. “There’s no one government, no one entity, no one stakeholder that’s going to build UTM, and then we’re all going to join it,” Evans said. Instead, he believes UTM will be built like a 5G cell phone network, with the help of GUTMA, which includes members from industry, ANSPs, and regulation and standards groups. In essence, 5G will be able to connect aviation communications with mobile networks. “A lot of people hear UTM and they think rules,” Evans said. But the goal of GUTMA is to empower innovation, develop a framework for interoperable technologies, and enable a marketplace of global services where the
Carlos Hernandez Medel, everis Group, presents a talk at the Global UTM Workshop.
rules have been integrated into UTM. GUTMA is a way to empower regulators, Evans said, and offer technical solutions for regulatory problems. “Our goal is to create blueprints that industry and regulators can rely on.” Evans said GUTMA has submitted a protocol for registration to Interna-
See you in Madrid for World ATM Congress 2019
tional Civic Air Organization (ICAO), and is also working on other regula-
tory and standards issues. Carlos Hernandez Medel, everis Group, said safety and security requirements must be an inherent part of the UTM. He noted that SecRAM (Security and Risk Assessment Methodology) is currently in development within SESAR, based on ISO 27005. Also, SORA (Specific Operation Risk Assessment) is currently in development by the Joint Authorities for Rulemaking on Unmanned Systems (JARUS.) “I would rather like to be the first to say to the world that my drone system is the first to be compliant with safety and security standards,“ Medel said. Anna von Groote, EUROCAE, discussed the European UAS Standards Continued on page 9
266 partipants launched paper airplanes for the Women of Aviation Worldwide Week’s Pink Paper Plane Challenge. —Turn to page 3 for the scoop
12-14 March 2019
IFEMA, Feria de Madrid