From: CNN Money
COMMENT - When you are living in a million dollar home and have time to belong to local charities it is easy to say to yourself you must be a good person, not someone who is part of a chain of causality which is killing people every day. But in the case of Green Hills Software's Management Team, this is illusion.
When you ignore the impact of your actions you are accountable.
The unmanned systems industry's largest trade group predicts hundreds of thousands of jobs and tens of billions in economic impacts from domestic drones -- if the FAA doesn't get in the way.
By Clay Dillow
FORTUNE -- The drones are coming, according to the world's largest
unmanned systems industry organization. And they are likely to bring
high-tech jobs, millions in tax revenues, and tens of billions in
economic impact with them. A report released today by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International
(AUVSI) forecasts that if the Federal Aviation Administration meets its
2015 deadline for integrating unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) into the
national civilian airspace, the total domestic economic impact will
reach more than $82.1 billion between 2015 and 2025 -- creating more
than 100,000 high-paying jobs in the process.
In the near term, says AUVSI, the outlook appears even rosier. More
than 70,000 of the total 103,776 new jobs forecast nationally by 2025
will be created in just the first three years after airspace integration
is completed, along with $13.6 billion in overall economic impact in
the same span. Meanwhile states where the UAS industry is strongest will
begin collecting what will eventually amount to $482 million in tax
revenue in the decade following full airspace integration.
That's assuming integration happens at all. Under the 2012 FAA Reauthorization Act,
Congress ordered aviation authorities to develop a regulatory framework
for the testing and licensing of commercial drones by 2015, a deadline
that the FAA may not meet. The process of naming six federally approved
UAS testing sites necessary for developing the kinds of technologies
that will enable safe airspace integration was delayed indefinitely last
year while the agency dealt with various public privacy concerns (the
process resumed last month), and a variety of critical technical
problems -- not least of which involve "sense and avoid" technologies,
which allow unmanned systems to maintain safe distances between each
other as well as manned aircraft -- have yet to be resolved.
For every year the FAA delays the integration of UAS into the
national airspace, the economy loses $10 billion in potential economic
gain, the report claims, a number that's not lost on states vying not
only to play host to the FAA's UAS test sites but also to woo
UAS-related companies. The drone economy won't be spread evenly; the
AUVSI report names California, Washington, Texas, Florida, and Arizona
as the states most likely to reap the economic rewards of a domestic
drone boom. Other states are scrambling to capture a piece of the
industry as well. Oklahoma has been noticeably visible at various
industry trade shows of late, while Indiana and Ohio have partnered in
an effort to make their shared economic region a more attractive place
for the FAA to place a test site, which both states expect could
generate thousands of jobs and billions in economic activity between
them.
MORE: Drive my Porsche, please
Who exactly will be buying
all these domestic drones? It's probably not who you think. While
legitimate privacy concerns surround the proliferation of small UAS in
the civilian airspace, sales of small surveillance drones to state and
local authorities are only expected to make up a small portion of that
spending. Agricultural applications dwarf all other categories, the
AUVSI report claims, accounting for $75.6 billion of total national
economic impacts by 2025, whereas government authorities like police,
firefighters, and other first responders will generate just $3.2
billion. All other applications -- which range from weather and
environmental monitoring, to oil and gas exploration, to aerial imaging
and mapping -- will also result in a $3.2 billion impact over the same
period.
This domestic drone boom
would rest on the bedrock of an already thriving UAS industry largely
bankrolled by the U.S. government. Monrovia, Calif.-based AeroVironment,
for instance, does a brisk business outfitting the Pentagon with the
majority of the tens of thousands of small UAS fielded by U.S. troops in
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan over the last decade, but last year
unveiled its Qube quadrotor, the company's first small UAS specifically
targeted at law enforcement and first-response applications. Others in
the defense space have likewise been busy developing and acquiring small
UAS technologies over the past 18 months, largely in anticipation of
the development of a domestic drone marketplace that the FAA predicts
will add 30,000 UAS to American skies by decade's end.
All of that is to say that if the AUVSI report is any indication --
and those in both industry and government seem to think it has some
merits -- the skies over America will soon be a very crowded place. As
will the UAS marketplace.
MORE
No comments:
Post a Comment