Preparing for PRC Drone Restrictions: A Call to Action for the U.S. Drone Industry

- AUVSI’s Michael Robbins Calls for BVLOS Rule and Action on Chinese Drones in Morning Keynote
- AUVSI Op-Ed: Ending Reliance on PRC Drones: Why the U.S. Must Act Now to Secure the Future of Domestic Drone Manufacturing
- AUVSI Urges Congress to Fast-Track Uncrewed Systems for National Defense and Navy Readiness
- FY25 NDAA: A Temporary Reprieve for Chinese Drones or the Beginning of the End?

Miriam McNabb is the Editor-in-Chief of DRONELIFE and CEO of JobForDrones, a professional drone services marketplace, and a fascinated observer of the emerging drone industry and the regulatory environment for drones. Miriam has penned over 3,000 articles focused on the commercial drone space and is an international speaker and recognized figure in the industry. Miriam has a degree from the University of Chicago and over 20 years of experience in high tech sales and marketing for new technologies.
For drone industry consulting or writing, Email Miriam.
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AUVSI continues to throw its small business, drone service provider (DSP) constituents under the bus to support it US OEM donors. Several things in this Op Ed are not true. Starting with the arguments that Chinese drones a well-documented security. First, essentially every published risk has been shown to be false, from facial recognition to reading of heartbeats to storing everything on their cloud for the PRC to mine with AI. When confronted with the facts that these are untrue, security folks run behind the veil of, “Well, that’s classified.” But if their publicly released facts are so fallacious, how in the world can one believe that their classified facts have better due diligence and scrutiny.
Second, there is no US made prosumer drone being made. Only higher end drones which are an order of magnitude more expensive than Chinese drones. So if FCC bans transmission of Chinese drones, overnight the AUVSI’s DSP constituents are shut down. This is billions of dollars of business gone. The small business will not be able to afford the switch. No grants are being made to small business DSP. Everything will go to the large corporations who can afford the drone, just as they afford to make huge donations to AUVSI, to get them to throw the small DSPs under the bus. Even if they existing drones being used are grandfathered, this only buys 2-3 years, the average shelf life of a business drone.
Finally, competition makes an industry stronger. DJI and Autel are not going to do anything to lose US business, their main bread and butter, They have already demonstrated by shutting down their cloud and by shutting down the geofence system which was claimed to be the mechanism by which they could ground every drone in the US. But US OEMs cannot compete, mainly because labor overhead in the US is through the roof with taxes (SSA, Medicare, Income, State Income, and Local Income) and mandatory healthcare. Just stating that as a fact. So their solution, and what they pay lobbyists and professional organizations like AUVSI to proclaim, is to kill competition and allow them to continue to make poor quality drones at exorbitant prices.
Mr. Robbins, thank you for continuing to show your true colors. Maybe a forensic audit needs to be run through AUVSI’s books, like what is occurring with the federal government, right now.
Facts really should be checked before stories like this are posted publicly unless you’re happy to be just labelled as yet another paid off reporter.
Security concerns cannot be understated – DJI devices specifically has been independently investigated by multiple US organizations to find no more vulnerabilities than similar equipment manufactured in the US.
capabilities of U.S. and allied nation drones have advanced remarkably in recent years – unfortunately there are very few which are actually at the level of DJI and other PRC made equipment and the ones that do met this standard are so expensive they are outside most peoples price ranges so the choices are either PRC equipment or poor equipment with poor results
PRC drones are subsidized – in the case of DJ, I looked into this a while ago. DJI products are exactly 25% more expensive in the US than they are in China and the US puts a 25% tariff on their products so that would mean China was subsidizing the products in their own country as well which I do believe would make much sense.
Personally, I’m getting sick of this political games played by US companies using unjust legal means to push out other companies that have worked hard to produce good products. I’d like to see them put more efforts into improving their own products to match instead.
Michael Robbins is flat out lying or is woefully uneducated on the subject. So many of the things he says are flat out not true. Liar liar pants on fire.
American education and ingenuity is so far behind Chinese I fear they may completely overtake us in all areas. They begin intensive education and training at 5 years of age consequently they are far ahead while are kids play the videos made by Chinese students. Our only hope is someone like Trump to balance education.