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The Impact of the First Commercial Drone Flight in America

PumaAE_alaska_launch_lgEveryone’s a critic

On Tuesday the FAA approved the first commercial drone flight over U.S soil. The UAS community had mixed reactions to the news, none of which could be characterized as enthusiastic.

Here’s the bad news:

However, as the UAS community rolls their eyes and chalks this announcement up as another tip-toe around the actual problem, lets take a moment to recognize that there is actual progress in the subtext of this announcement:

On paper, there is now a concrete precedent for using drones for commercial purposes in the US.

“It specifically says you can make money doing it [flying drones],” said Steven Hogan, a lawyer at Ausley McMullen who is part of the burgeoning business of drone law. “I can’t tell you what the time frame is for getting approval but…its better than six months ago when they said you can’t make money without a COA [certificate of authorization].”

“The show has started.”

The truth is, a small number of people have been piloting drones commercially all over the country without FAA approval for some time (and for good reason).

But this fact, along with the FAA approval, is part of the natural cadence of these types of processes.

The opening of the skies is not going to be a floodgate. Michael Huerta (Administrator of the FAA) is not going to hold a press conference and say “Here are the rules we came up with, you can fly now!”

Opening the skies to drones will be a trickle rather than a flood. Five years from now when we look back at this process, Tuesday’s approval of BP to use the PUMA for ‘commercial’ purposes will be mentioned as an important step.

Naturally, the first organizations to obtain special permission to fly commercially are going to be those with the deepest pockets (big oil being first, Hollywood most likely being the second). Its the same reason you often see celebrities with cutting edge gadgets before they are widely available: those with cash and connections always get the first slice of the pie.

It will take time and it will no doubt be frustrating, but at least they have started cutting.

 

 

 

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