Newzopedia.com (Media partner with Webeesocial.com) :
Vodafone
today announced the commencement of trials of the world’s first air traffic
control drone tracking and safety technology. Vodafone’s pioneering approach
uses innovative 4G Internet of Things (IoT) technology to protect aircraft from
catastrophic accidents as well as prevent inadvertent or criminal drone
incursions at sensitive locations such as airports, prisons and hospitals.
Commercial
civilian drones are too small to be tracked by conventional radar. They present
a serious risk to pilots worldwide, particularly in the immediate vicinity of
airfields and airports. Drones are also used for criminal purposes such as drug
smuggling and delivering contraband to prisoners. Additionally, security and
intelligence services are increasingly concerned that terrorists could use
drones adapted to carry small but lethal explosive payloads to attack locations
targeted using GPS.
The
risk to aircraft is growing at an exponential rate. Analysis from the Single
European Sky Air Traffic Management Research (SESAR) project indicates that by
2050 drones will log more than 250 million flying hours per year over densely
populated areas of the European Union, seven times the cumulative annual flying
hours of conventional crewed aircraft.*
The
Vodafone IoT drone tracking and safety technology trials support the objectives
of the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), with whom Vodafone has
collaborated. EASA is currently developing new pan-European rulesto regulate
the operation of drones.**
The
new technology developed by Vodafone also enhances the European Union’s
potential to become the centre of global innovation in drone technology in line
with the European Commission’s “U-space” vision for innovative and safe drone
operations.
Pioneering
technology
Vodafone has developed the world’s first Radio
Positioning System (RPS) for drones. This uses a 4G modem and SIM embedded
within each drone to enable:
·
real-time tracking of each drone (with
up to 50 metre accuracy) by drone operators and authorised bodies such as air
traffic control;
·
over-the-horizon/beyond line-of-sight
control by the operator, greatly reducing the risk of accidental incursions
when operators lose sight of their drones;
·
protective geofencing, with drones
pre-programmed to land automatically or return to the operator when approaching
predetermined exclusion zones (such as airports and prisons);
·
emergency remote control intervention
to provide the authorities with the means of overriding a drone operator’s
control to alter a drone’s flight path or force it to land; and
·
SIM-based
e-identification and owner registration.
4G
mobile networks operate with long-established and proven security systems,
including strong end-to-end encryption over-the-air from SIM to base station.
RPS location data is significantly harder to hack or spoof than GPS location
data, and the data connection used to control the drone offers the operator
significant advantages over current drone radio control protocols including
greater resilience and over-the-horizon real-time feedback.
The
Vodafone RPS is combined with Artificial Intelligence algorithms - also
developed by Vodafone - to enable very large numbers of drones to be tracked
and controlled remotely. Vodafone has placed its RPS research and associated
intellectual property in the public domain with no licensing fees for re-use in
order to accelerate the pace of drone safety and geolocation innovation
worldwide.
In
a preliminary trial in late 2017 - the first of its kind in the world -
Vodafone used its 4G network to control a 1.3 metre wingspan, 2 kilogram X-UAV
drone. Throughout the preliminary trial - which took place over a 32-kilometre
course around the town of Isla Mayor, near Sevilla in Spain - the drone
transmitted a real-time HD video feed and flight data including speed, RPS
location and GPS coordinates.
Further
trials, which will be coordinated with the relevant authorities, are now being scheduled in Spain and Germany through 2018 with the
intention of making the Vodafone drone tracking and safety technology available
for commercial use from 2019.
The
technology behind RPS will also be utilised to boost the functionality of other
IoT devices in future - from luggage tags to bicycles. RPS could support, or replace,
GPS in some IoT devices, enabling better location tracking, particularly
indoors, the creation of smaller devices and enhanced security.
Vodafone
Group Chief Technology Officer Johan Wibergh, said: “This groundbreaking
innovation by Vodafone will help to ensure the skies stay safe as drones become
ubiquitous, everywhere.”
Deputy
Director General of the European Commission Matthew Baldwin said: “The
Commission supports all trials aimed at realising our U-space vision for safe
commercial drone operations in the EU – there is a growing network of demonstrations
and projects across the EU. We look
forward to hearing the results of Vodafone’s work.”
Yves
Morier, Principal Advisor to the Flight Standards Director, EASA, said: “We
welcome Vodafone’s focus on developing new approaches to ensure safe and
responsible drone use.”
Sky's the limit with Vodafone's groundbreaking IoT drone tracking and safety tech trials! 🚀✨ Exciting times for innovation and airspace security. Kudos!
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