Guiding Principles for the Commercial Drone Industry Security Issues September 2017 The commercial drone market is on the cusp of taking off. The safety, security and efficiency benefits from using UAS for commercial and public safety tasks are innumerable. From industrial inspection and disaster response, to precision agriculture and cell tower inspection, to medical delivery, newsgathering and critical infrastructure security – and everything in between – the positive impact of drones is seemingly endless. A recent PricewaterhouseCoopers report estimated the global market value of UAS-powered solutions at over $127 billion. While the potential for this market is substantial, the policymaking around drone use has lagged behind technology. Current rules limit drone flights beyond visual line of sight, over people, and at night. As national security concerns have recently been raised, the Commercial Drone Alliance (“Alliance”) is committed to working with the federal government to integrate drones into our National Airspace System safely and securely. To this end, the Alliance recently hosted a Domestic Drone Security Summit, bringing policymakers and industry together to inspire collaboration and understanding. Building on that conversation and others, the Alliance here suggests a framework for the federal government as it considers drone security issues. Any Drone Security Legislation Must be Narrowly Tailored: The Alliance appreciates the common interest that the government, industry, and the general public all share in establishing reasonable limitations to protect against potential public safety and homeland security threats posed by UAS. In this spirit, the Alliance has provided the Administration with comments on its draft legislation entitled “Official Actions to Address Threats Posed by Unmanned Aircraft Systems to Public Safety or Homeland Security.” While the Alliance is generally supportive of the goals of the legislation, we believe that any legislation must be tailored narrowly. It should enable law enforcement to mitigate or confront drone threats but avoid unintended consequences that may restrict innovation, adversely affect authorized commercial drone flights, threaten privacy, civil rights, or civil liberties, or otherwise cause harm. Enable Technology Solutions to Policy Problems: There are many technology solutions to the security issues that we face. For example, Unmanned Aircraft Systems Traffic Management (UTM) systems in development now will open the airspace in a safe, secure, and responsible way. We should seek to implement UTM in a timely manner, and the federal government must adopt further enabling regulations with UTM in mind. Moreover, as noted above, the federal
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