An aviation industry task force is recommending that operators be
required to register drones weighing as little as a half a pound, a
threshold that could include some remote-controlled toys, industry
officials said.
The threshold is based on the
potential impact a drone that size would have if it fell from the sky
and struck a person or if it collided with a helicopter or plane, they
said.
The recommendations were expected to be submitted to the FAA
by Saturday. The FAA then can modify them, and hopes to issue the rules
before Christmas to begin registering some of the thousands of drones
expected to be purchased over the holidays. One industry official said
the target date is December 21.
Four people familiar with the advisory
group's deliberations described the conclusions to The Associated
Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because the FAA asked that the
discussions be kept private.
The registration requirement would
apply to drone operators rather than individual drones to avoid
requiring operators who own multiple drones to register more than once.
The operator would receive a single registration number, which would
then be affixed to the body of each drone.
People who already own drones weighing more than a half-pound would have to register them.
Registration
could be done through an FAA website where an operator can provide
name, address, phone number and other contact information and receive a
registration number.
The Consumer Technology Association estimates
700,000 drones will be sold in the U.S. this year, including 400,000 in
the last quarter.
FAA officials said when they announced the
formation of the task force last month that they hoped registration will
help create a "culture of accountability" among drone operators and
allow owners to be tracked down in the event of an accident.
The
FAA now receives about 100 reports a month from pilots who say they've
seen drones flying near planes and airports, up dramatically from last
year. So far there've been no accidents, but agency officials have said
they're concerned that even a small drone might cause serious damage if
it is sucked into an engine, smashes into an airliner's windshield or
collides with a helicopter's rotors.
Helicopters are the greatest
concern because they frequently fly below 500 feet in the same airspace
as small drones, said Jim Williams, the FAA's former top drone official
now at an international law firm with drone-industry clients.
There
are no studies on how much damage drones of different weight might
cause to a helicopter or aircraft engine, he said. "I am not a fan of
the weight limit because there's no science behind it," Williams said.
The
weight threshold for drone registration in Europe is about 2 pounds,
while Canadian officials are leaning toward a threshold of about 1
pound, industry officials said.
Williams said he hopes the FAA
will add other requirements to the half-pound threshold that would
eliminate most toys from the registration requirement.
For
example, many drones can navigate independently rather than relying on
the operator to be constantly steering, Williams said. Operators can
preset waypoints to fly a drone beyond their line of sight. If the
waypoints are incorrectly set for an altitude or location where manned
aircraft fly, "that's where the risk really comes from," he said.
Williams
said drones that can download real-time video are also a concern,
because the operator becomes engrossed in the picture and is distracted.
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