US moves towards mandatory registration of drones

Washington, November 24

Owners of drones weighing 250 grams or more should provide authorities with their name and address and put an ID number on the aircraft, experts hired by the US government recommended on Monday.

The tips came as the government rushes to make registration for the popular aircraft mandatory ahead of an expected onslaught of Christmas purchases of them.

The recommendations were made by the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Registration Task Force, which was chartered by the Federation Aviation Administration (FAA).

The group said registration should apply to ones weighing 250 grams up to a limit of 25 kilos, said Dave Vos, co-chairman of the task force.

Registration is designed to limit illegal or dangerous flying of drones, which is on the rise. The experts’ recommendations mark the first step toward adopting of a formal law to this effect.

Drones can be as small and simple as children’s toys or larger and highly sophisticated, used by aficionados to do aerial stunts and film from the sky.

But the littlest ones — very light and with batteries enabling them to fly for just a short while — could be exempt from registration under the recommendations released on Monday.

The working group included people from the recreation industry, police, airline pilots, flying clubs, manufacturers of mini-cameras often mounted on drones and representatives of big retailers like Walmart or Amazon, for which drones might some day be a way to make deliveries.

Current US law bars drone operators from flying them above an altitude of 400 feet (120 metres) or near an airport.