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Pathways to unsegregated sharing of airspace: views of the Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV) industry

Pathways to unsegregated sharing of airspace: views of the Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV) industry
Pathways to unsegregated sharing of airspace: views of the Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV) industry
The uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV or drone) industry is expanding, offering services such as video/photography, inspection, monitoring, surveying, and logistics. This is leading to competing demands for airspace with existing crewed aircraft activities, especially in uncontrolled airspace. As a result, there is an increasingly urgent need for a shared airspace solution that enables drones to be integrated with the wider aviation community in unsegregated operations. The purpose of this research was to engage with the drone industry to understand their issues regarding shared airspace as an important first step in the co-development of operating procedures that can provide equitable airspace access for all. An online, interactive workshop format was employed, with participants (n ~80) drawn from the UK drone industry and other attendant organisations. Verbal and written data were recorded, and then analysed using thematic analysis. The findings summarise the issues on a range of topics, grouped into three over-arching themes: (1) operational environment; (2) technical and regulatory environment; and (3) equity and wider society. Results suggested that important issues included the necessity for a dependable detect-and-avoid (DAA) system for in-flight de-confliction, based on onboard electronic conspicuity (EC) devices, and the need for support for shared airspace from the wider aviation community. This study contributes to the stakeholder engagement that will be essential if the co-development of a shared airspace solution is to be widely acceptable to all.
Drone, Electronic conspicuity, Shared airspace, UAV, Unsegregated
2504-446X
Grote, Matthew
f29566f9-42a7-498a-9671-8661a4287754
Pilko, Aliaksei
862c6e08-d848-49f9-ae61-d222751d6422
Scanlan, James
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Cherrett, Thomas
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Dickinson, Janet
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Smith, Angela
ad7d3dfe-2c8d-4778-b07d-cccc5885f00a
Oakey, Andy
dfd6e317-1e6d-429c-a3e0-bc80e92787d1
Marsden, Greg
0a1e2b6e-fc19-42e5-8354-cc0796fa7f0a
Grote, Matthew
f29566f9-42a7-498a-9671-8661a4287754
Pilko, Aliaksei
862c6e08-d848-49f9-ae61-d222751d6422
Scanlan, James
7ad738f2-d732-423f-a322-31fa4695529d
Cherrett, Thomas
e5929951-e97c-4720-96a8-3e586f2d5f95
Dickinson, Janet
0d382d4e-a720-4b88-afd0-b4f1bb0a34e8
Smith, Angela
ad7d3dfe-2c8d-4778-b07d-cccc5885f00a
Oakey, Andy
dfd6e317-1e6d-429c-a3e0-bc80e92787d1
Marsden, Greg
0a1e2b6e-fc19-42e5-8354-cc0796fa7f0a

Grote, Matthew, Pilko, Aliaksei, Scanlan, James, Cherrett, Thomas, Dickinson, Janet, Smith, Angela, Oakey, Andy and Marsden, Greg (2021) Pathways to unsegregated sharing of airspace: views of the Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV) industry. Drones, 5 (4), [150]. (doi:10.3390/drones5040150).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV or drone) industry is expanding, offering services such as video/photography, inspection, monitoring, surveying, and logistics. This is leading to competing demands for airspace with existing crewed aircraft activities, especially in uncontrolled airspace. As a result, there is an increasingly urgent need for a shared airspace solution that enables drones to be integrated with the wider aviation community in unsegregated operations. The purpose of this research was to engage with the drone industry to understand their issues regarding shared airspace as an important first step in the co-development of operating procedures that can provide equitable airspace access for all. An online, interactive workshop format was employed, with participants (n ~80) drawn from the UK drone industry and other attendant organisations. Verbal and written data were recorded, and then analysed using thematic analysis. The findings summarise the issues on a range of topics, grouped into three over-arching themes: (1) operational environment; (2) technical and regulatory environment; and (3) equity and wider society. Results suggested that important issues included the necessity for a dependable detect-and-avoid (DAA) system for in-flight de-confliction, based on onboard electronic conspicuity (EC) devices, and the need for support for shared airspace from the wider aviation community. This study contributes to the stakeholder engagement that will be essential if the co-development of a shared airspace solution is to be widely acceptable to all.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 13 December 2021
Published date: 15 December 2021
Keywords: Drone, Electronic conspicuity, Shared airspace, UAV, Unsegregated

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 453116
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453116
ISSN: 2504-446X
PURE UUID: 30b2f803-7289-444f-9ec7-20054bacefbc
ORCID for Matthew Grote: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5590-7150
ORCID for Aliaksei Pilko: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0023-0300
ORCID for Thomas Cherrett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0394-5459
ORCID for Andy Oakey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1796-5485

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 08 Jan 2022 22:20
Last modified: 12 Nov 2024 03:08

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Contributors

Author: Matthew Grote ORCID iD
Author: Aliaksei Pilko ORCID iD
Author: James Scanlan
Author: Thomas Cherrett ORCID iD
Author: Janet Dickinson
Author: Angela Smith
Author: Andy Oakey ORCID iD
Author: Greg Marsden

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