Tourists will soon be allowed to fly drones in Dubai
07:36AM Tue 17 Oct, 2017
Aviation authorities are working on a mechanism where tourists can register online and get a certificate subject to an in-house validation of their skills in Dubai, which will allow them to fly their drones around landmarks in Dubai.
The new regulation was announced on the sidelines of the two-day Unmanned Aerial System Forum, which began on Monday in Dubai.
Also on Monday, a top official at the Dubai Civil Aviation Authority revealed that tourists have dropped 12 drones on the premises of a famous landmark hotel in Dubai in the past year and a half.
The tourists were unaware that the radio frequency will go out of reach when flying around such a large hotel, the head of airspace safety section at the Dubai Civil Aviation Authority (DCAA), Michael Rudolph, told Khaleej Times at the sidelines of the two-day Unmanned Aerial System Forum in Dubai.
The management of the hotel reported the incident to the DCAA each time a drone would land near their hotel and the authorities would come and retrieve it.
As for residents, there are several regulations that are put in place to legally allow them to operate drones in the country.
All drone operators, whether hobbyists or commercial, are required to register their drone and the pilot with the DCAA. It is mandatory for all drone pilots to obtain a drone licence, which permits them to fly an unmanned aerial vehicle.
Rudolph revealed the authority expects to accumulate an overall figure of 5,000 drone registrations by the end of this year.
"The resolution number 4 of 2017 allows the fines as well as a prosecution if you do not register your drone and yourself with reference to this entity," Rudolph said.
"The fine varies. It could be up to Dh20,000 and also a prison sentence so it's really not worth not taking a chance of not registering with the DCAA."
Since 2015, there have been four incidents where drones have caused either the Dubai or Sharjah airports to shut down, costing the aviation industry millions of dollars. Following this incidents, strict regulations have come into place for drone usage in the UAE.
Rudolph said no one has been fined as of yet for flying an unregistered drone because the authorities are "still tolerating and educating".