EU's drone airspace plan finally has a coordinated timeline
A new EASA framework brings drone airspace integration in Europe under a coordinated timetable. Operators have wanted this for five years.
画像クレジット: Photo by Jared Brashier on Unsplash · source
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency has published a coordinated implementation timetable for U-space, the bloc's framework for integrating drones into low-altitude airspace alongside traditional aviation. After five years of fragmented national approaches, drone operators in Europe finally have a single roadmap.
EASA's notice sets out the timetable. POLITICO Europe catches the political importance: the new framework ends roughly five years of national-level fragmentation, with operators welcoming the coordination.
What U-space actually is
U-space is the European equivalent of the FAA's UTM (Unmanned Traffic Management) concept. The goal is to allow large numbers of drones to operate safely in low-altitude airspace by sharing position information through a digital network, deconflicting routes automatically, and coordinating with traditional aviation control where their volumes overlap.
The framework has existed conceptually since 2021. The implementation, until now, has been left to individual member states, each at its own pace and with its own technical choices. The result has been a patchwork that makes cross-border drone operations needlessly complicated.
The coordinated timeline
The new EASA framework sets out a phased rollout from 2026 through 2029. Phase 1 covers the basic services: e-identification, geo-awareness, and traffic information. Phase 2 adds conflict resolution and weather information services. Phase 3 covers the most complex services, including coordination with traditional manned aviation in shared airspace volumes.
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