1 / 7

A Point of View of an Aircraft Manufacturer on UAV Certification & Operation

A Point of View of an Aircraft Manufacturer on UAV Certification & Operation. EASA UAV Workshop Paris February 1 st 2008. Plan of the Presentation. 1. UAV SPECIFICITIES UAV SAFETY OBJECTIVE SPECIFICITY UAV COLLISION AVOIDANCE SPECIFICITY UAV COMMUNICATION SPECIFICITY

Download Presentation

A Point of View of an Aircraft Manufacturer on UAV Certification & Operation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Point of View of an Aircraft Manufacturer on UAV Certification & Operation EASA UAV WorkshopParis February 1st 2008 SL2008-05 UAV Specificities EASA Workshop 080201.ppt

  2. Plan of the Presentation • 1. UAV SPECIFICITIES • UAV SAFETY OBJECTIVE SPECIFICITY • UAV COLLISION AVOIDANCE SPECIFICITY • UAV COMMUNICATION SPECIFICITY • 2. REMINDER OF HIGH LEVEL GROUP RECOMMENDATIONS • 3. CONCLUSIONS SL2008-05 UAV Specificities EASA Workshop 080201.ppt

  3. UAV Safety Objective Specificity • SAFETY OBJECTIVES • Aircraft safety objectives are mainly oriented by the onboard people safety • As UAVs have no onboard people Aircraft safety objectives can no longer be directly reusedTherefore the protection of on-ground people is becoming the main objectiveSafety Objectives to be determined providing the appropriate safety level • OPERATIONS IN "GENERAL AIR TRAFFIC" • As UAV safety objectives are addressing the safety of on-ground populations UAVs whatever their status ("Civil" or "State" one) must have the same safety objectivesAll UAVs flying over Europe will have to be in agreement with these safety objectives • An agreement between FAA & EASA on these safety objectives is key for worldwide UAV operations • Later these safety objectives will have to be recognized at the ICAO level SL2008-05 UAV Specificities EASA Workshop 080201.ppt

  4. UAV Collision Avoidance Specificity • SAFETY OF COLLISION AVOIDANCE • Today based on the pilot capacity to avoid the collision ("see & avoid" principle) • NEW METHOD FOR SEPARATION & COLLISION AVOIDANCE • It is suggested to use a "1309" approach :A method where collision risk is defined by safety objectives and validated by safety analysis • With such a method, no longer any need to compare "see & avoid " to "sense and avoid"The proposed system will have to be certified in agreement with its requirements SL2008-05 UAV Specificities EASA Workshop 080201.ppt

  5. UAV Communication Specificity • ATC PILOT COMMUNICATION LINK • UAV will be controlled by the pilot from "ground station" • "Terrestrial links" may have to be considered (a safer way compared to radio link) • It's also the possibility to provide UAV pilot with the ATC tactical situation • UAV CONTROL LINK • Until certification of fully autonomous UAVs, UAVs will request specific control link • This requirement has to be considered by the aeronautical communities(frequency allocation, minimum bandwidth, integrity, continuity of service…) • UAV & ATC • UAVs as the other airspace users might have some specific operational constraints • (Speed, altitude, rate of turn,…) These constraints have to be considered • UAVs as new users should benefit of a specific ATC treatment during “introduction” period • This will provide other airspace users with more confidence in UAV behavior SL2008-05 UAV Specificities EASA Workshop 080201.ppt

  6. As a ReminderHigh Level group Recommendations" • " GREATER RESPONSIBILITY TO INDUSTRY • Involve industry more systematically in the rulemaking process for the aviation system". • "BETTER REGULATION • Apply the principles of Better Regulation, avoiding over-regulation and undertaking full impact assessments and consultation" • "DELIVER CONTINUOUS IMPROVING SAFETY • Empower EASA as the single EU instruments for aviation safety regulation" • "AIRSPACE USERS • All users require equitable and non-discriminatory access to infrastructure and services" Report of the High Level Groupfor the futureEuropean AviationRegulatory Framework July 2007 SL2008-05 UAV Specificities EASA Workshop 080201.ppt

  7. Conclusions • WE ARE IN A COMPETITIVE WORLD • UAV will exist if their Business Models are cost effective • European Industry must have the opportunity to play an active role in UAV developments • A NEW APPROACH OF AIRCRAFT COLLISION RISK HAS TO BE CONSIDERED • BLINDLY APPLYING MANNED CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS WOULD LEAD INDUSTRY TO UNNECESSARY ECONOMIC ISSUES • Safety objectives as weight limits quantitative values contained into the manned CS cannot be blindly reused for UAV certification • FURTHER ANALYSES ARE NEEDED BEFORE EASA FINAL POSITION ON UAV SL2008-05 UAV Specificities EASA Workshop 080201.ppt

More Related