Australian Aviation - July 2018

(Ben Green) #1

84 AUSTRALIAN AVIATION


OUT OF


SIGHT


N


ew Zealand’s commercial
drone market is booming,
largely thanks to a collaborative
approach by its Civil Aviation
Authority.
Its Part 101 consultation rules
and Part 102 unmanned aircraft
certification has resulted in 108
unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs)
receiving certification in the past few
years.
More than 400 commercial UAV
users are registered on the website of
their national body, UAVNZ.
UAVNZ chair Andy Grant said
if a commercial operator is able to
demonstrate a safe way of bringing
a drone business to market then the
CAA is very open to discussing and
accommodating new developments.
As the market for commercial
applications opens up in a wide
number of fields, be it agriculture,
mining, search and rescue, urban
planning or anywhere where an
unmanned vehicle can go where it is
risky for manned vehicles and where it
makes economic sense, New Zealand’s
commercial operators are jumping in.
Now the focus is on technology
and applications for flying beyond the
line-of-sight (BLOS).
A report commissioned by
Callaghan Innovation, a government
organisation tasked with making New

Zealand business more innovative,
estimated last year that flying drones
out of the operator’s line of sight
could provide economic gains of up
to NZ$190 million annually to the
country’s farming, forestry and energy
sectors.
Last year Taranaki drone company
Drone Technologies controlled
remotely an unmanned aircraft in New
Zealand’s first “beyond line-of-sight”
CAA-approved flight to inspect a
30km section of power transmission
lines in the Rimutaka Ranges near

Wellington for electricity utility,
Transpower.
Managing director Ben Plummer
said the flight demonstrated the
importance of beyond line-of-sight
in industry and agriculture, in risky
conditions, delivering parcels and
medical supplies to remote locations
or communities in crisis.
For the trial the drone had the
same procedures, safety checks and
planning as a manned flight, including
a flightplan, getting permission to
operate in that airspace at that time,

Drones in NZ


WRITER: DENISE MCNABB

New Zealand pushes boundaries


with commercial drones


‘New


Zealand’s


commercial


operators are


jumping in.’

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