FAA Approves Kansas for First BVLOS Drone Flight
The
first-ever beyond-visual-line-of-sight (BVLOS) drone operation using only
onboard detect-and-avoid systems in the U.S. will be conducted in Kansas
following just-received FAA approval, the Kansas Department of Transportation
(KDOT) announced today. It won’t require visual observers or ground-based
radar.
A
collaboration between Kansas State University Polytechnic Campus, electric
utility Westar Energy, Iris Automation, and KDOT, the operation will involve a
drone flying a nine-mile track evaluating technologies for inspecting power
lines in rural Kansas. It is hoped it will be the first step in allowing
routine commercial infrastructure inspection across the state.
“The
ability to fly BVLOS missions without ground-based radar or visual observers is
a significant advancement, and Westar Energy views this as an opportunity to
play a key role in shaping the future of [drone] operations within the utility
industry,” Westar senior UAS coordinator Mike Kelly said.
Kansas officials credit the state’s participation
in the FAA’s Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Integration Pilot Program (IPP)
for approval to conduct the flights. K-State Polytechnic’s Applied Aviation
Research Center will oversee training and flight operations with a
cross-functional team from the 31-member KDOT IPP team. Flights will take place
over the next few months.
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