An Exploratory Investigation of UAS Regulations in Europe and the Impact on Effective Use and Economic Potential
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Related Work
3. Development of UAS Regulations
3.1. Global Scale Regulations
3.2. EU Drone Regulations
- UAS operation category “open”.
- UAS has a class that is set out in DRs EU 2019/945
- UAS maximum take-off mass should be less than 25 kg
- UAS operation is conducted in the visual line of sight VLOS and the UAS is kept at a safe distance of at least 1.5 km from inhabited areas, airports and sensitive zones, and at least 100 m from infrastructure like highways, hospitals, power plants, etc.
- During an operation, UAS do not carry dangerous goods and do not drop any material
- Flying height is limited to 120 m above the surface of the Earth”.
- “Specific” category of UAS operations
- “Certified” category of UAS operations.
4. Impact of New Regulations on UAS Operation
4.1. Challenges with UAS Registration
4.2. Visibility and Range Restrictions
4.3. Operational Risk Assessment
- VLOS or BVLOS in controlled areas (such as military areas);
- VLOS in sparsely populated areas;
- BVLOS in sparsely populated areas;
- VLOS in populated areas;
- BVLOS in populated areas.
- Mass m = 25 kg; air speed VTAS = 25 m/s; wingspan b = 3.6 m;
- The kinetic energy is calculated to be 7.8 kJ;
- With a wingspan of 3.6 m, this results in risk class <8 m, <1084 kJ;
- Competent or approved operator;
- Manufacturing of the UAS by competent entity;
- Competent maintenance;
- Compliance with design standard;
- System safety and reliability;
- Suitable command, control, and communication practices;
- Inspection of the UAS for compliance with the ConOps;
- Definition, validation and compliance with technical requirements and concerning human failure;
- Training and ability of the crew to deal with abnormal situations (covering technical and human failure);
- Safe recovery from technical problems;
- Procedures to deal with external disturbance;
- Appropriate external support for the mission;
- Coordination between the crew members;
- Operational crew (fit in physical and psychological sense);
- Automatic protection of the UAS against human failure;
- Handling of human failure;
- Human–machine interface;
- Detection and avoidance of critical environmental conditions;
- Definition and control of critical limits for operation;
- Construction and qualification for adverse conditions.
- Semantic data impact on risk assessment.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Subcategory | Class | MTOM Incl. Payload | Velocity | Max. AGL | Proof of Knowledge |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A1 Fly over people | C0 | <250 g | max 19 m/s | 120 m | Familiar with operation instructions |
C1 | <900 g | max 19 m/s | 120 m | Familiar with operation instructions Online training and test | |
A2 Fly close to people | C2 | <4 kg | - | 120 m | Familiar with operation instructions Online training and test Certificate “proof of knowledge” (according to German rules) |
A3 Fly far from people | C3 | <25 kg <Diameter 3m | - | 120 m | Familiar with operation instructions Online training and test |
C4 | <25 kg | - | - | ||
- | C5 | No max. MTOM defined | - | - | |
- | C6 | max 50 m/s | - |
Intrinsic UAS Ground Risk Class | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Max UAS characteristics dimension | 1 m | 3 m | 8 m | >8 m |
Typical kinetic energy expected | <700 J | <34 kJ | <1084 kJ | >1084 kJ |
Operational scenarios | ||||
VLOS/BVLOS over controlled ground area | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
VLOS in sparsely populated environment | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
BVLOS in sparsely populated environment | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
VLOS in populated environment | 4 | 5 | 6 | 8 |
BVLOS in populated environment | 5 | 6 | 8 | 10 |
VLOS over gathering of people | 7 | |||
BVLOS over gathering of people | 8 |
Robustness | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Mitigation Sequence | Mitigations for Ground Risk | Low/None | Medium | High |
M1 | Strategic mitigations for ground risk | 0: None −1: Low | −2 | −4 |
M2 | Effects of ground impact are reduced | 0 | −1 | −2 |
M3 | An Emergency Response Plan (ERP) is in place, operator validated and effective | 1 | 0 | −1 |
SAIL Determination | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Residual ARC | ||||
Final GRC | a | b | c | d |
≤2 | I | II | IV | VI |
3 | II | II | IV | VI |
4 | III | III | IV | VI |
5 | IV | IV | IV | VI |
6 | V | V | V | VI |
7 | VI | VI | VI | VI |
>7 | Category C operation |
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Alamouri, A.; Lampert, A.; Gerke, M. An Exploratory Investigation of UAS Regulations in Europe and the Impact on Effective Use and Economic Potential. Drones 2021, 5, 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones5030063
Alamouri A, Lampert A, Gerke M. An Exploratory Investigation of UAS Regulations in Europe and the Impact on Effective Use and Economic Potential. Drones. 2021; 5(3):63. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones5030063
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlamouri, Ahmed, Astrid Lampert, and Markus Gerke. 2021. "An Exploratory Investigation of UAS Regulations in Europe and the Impact on Effective Use and Economic Potential" Drones 5, no. 3: 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones5030063
APA StyleAlamouri, A., Lampert, A., & Gerke, M. (2021). An Exploratory Investigation of UAS Regulations in Europe and the Impact on Effective Use and Economic Potential. Drones, 5(3), 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/drones5030063