EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of Airworthiness

The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) plans to establish a sole risk-based set of regulations for drones to grant access to European airspace, thus opening a multibillion-euro market. One part of this new regulation set is the so-called “open” category, imposing only a minim...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Oliver Hirling, Florian Holzapfel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-07-01
Series:Aerospace
Subjects:
UAS
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/3/70
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spelling doaj-3bb091701878403e8fea1bb022b4b0862020-11-25T01:40:36ZengMDPI AGAerospace2226-43102018-07-01537010.3390/aerospace5030070aerospace5030070EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of AirworthinessOliver Hirling0Florian Holzapfel1Institute of Flight System Dynamics, Technische Universität München, 85748 Garching bei München, GermanyInstitute of Flight System Dynamics, Technische Universität München, 85748 Garching bei München, GermanyThe European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) plans to establish a sole risk-based set of regulations for drones to grant access to European airspace, thus opening a multibillion-euro market. One part of this new regulation set is the so-called “open” category, imposing only a minimum set of regulations. The EASA’s approach presents a strong converse to traditional and prescriptive airworthiness regulations. For decades, unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) have been state-of-the-art assets in military forces. Aiming at the fulfilment of complex missions in extreme environments, in different theatres of operation, and with different partners, military UAS need to be reliable, safe, and interoperable. Therefore, NATO established internationally accepted airworthiness standards. However, these standards might be too severe to be adhered to by small, commercial, off-the-shelf UAS in the up-to-25 kg category, preventing the military from benefiting from the now fast-growing civil drone market. Based on a sound literature review, the paper presents the EASA’s upcoming regulations for civil UAS and discusses if they are applicable to military UAS. Possible opportunities, challenges, and limitations of applying the approach for the military are shown.http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/3/70UASairworthinessmilitaryEASA“open” category
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oliver Hirling
Florian Holzapfel
spellingShingle Oliver Hirling
Florian Holzapfel
EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of Airworthiness
Aerospace
UAS
airworthiness
military
EASA
“open” category
author_facet Oliver Hirling
Florian Holzapfel
author_sort Oliver Hirling
title EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of Airworthiness
title_short EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of Airworthiness
title_full EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of Airworthiness
title_fullStr EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of Airworthiness
title_full_unstemmed EASA’s “Open” Category for Military UAS: Opportunities and Limitations in the Field of Airworthiness
title_sort easa’s “open” category for military uas: opportunities and limitations in the field of airworthiness
publisher MDPI AG
series Aerospace
issn 2226-4310
publishDate 2018-07-01
description The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) plans to establish a sole risk-based set of regulations for drones to grant access to European airspace, thus opening a multibillion-euro market. One part of this new regulation set is the so-called “open” category, imposing only a minimum set of regulations. The EASA’s approach presents a strong converse to traditional and prescriptive airworthiness regulations. For decades, unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) have been state-of-the-art assets in military forces. Aiming at the fulfilment of complex missions in extreme environments, in different theatres of operation, and with different partners, military UAS need to be reliable, safe, and interoperable. Therefore, NATO established internationally accepted airworthiness standards. However, these standards might be too severe to be adhered to by small, commercial, off-the-shelf UAS in the up-to-25 kg category, preventing the military from benefiting from the now fast-growing civil drone market. Based on a sound literature review, the paper presents the EASA’s upcoming regulations for civil UAS and discusses if they are applicable to military UAS. Possible opportunities, challenges, and limitations of applying the approach for the military are shown.
topic UAS
airworthiness
military
EASA
“open” category
url http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/5/3/70
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