Drones to feature advertising banners in Miami


Miami: If you visit the beach near Miami this winter, you may witness technology designed to shake up both the aviation and advertising industries: a drone towing a large banner through the sky.

US Federal aviation authorities have approved the first drone operation to take on the old business of small aircraft that lug long airborne advertisements, according to an announcement by the company behind the concept, Sustainable Skylines Corp.

Instead of having traditional planes hauling banners promoting beachwear, bars and crab shacks past sun bathers, Sustainable Skylines has Federal Aviation Administration approval to use a heavy-duty device without a pilot on board. It not only saves fuel and lowers cost, but is safer, the company said.

“This is the milestone we’ve been working toward for the past three years,” Jacob Stonecipher, Sustainable Skylines’ founder and chief executive officer, said in an interview.

The company also plans to use on-board cameras and mobile phone tracking to get more precise information on how many people can see the banners in an attempt to give advertisers better data, Stonecipher said.

As with other FAA drone approvals, the agency is moving slowly. The company must have spotters on the ground to make sure the drone, which can weigh as much as 55kg with a banner, steers clear of other aircraft.

And the initial approval is limited to the Miami area and it can’t be flown over people, so at least initially won’t be operating over sporting events or other large gatherings where banner towing is common.

“We want to prove we can do this safely in Miami Beach before we scale this to other markets,” Stonecipher said.

FAA officials in Florida must now approve specific flights, and the company is in the process of hiring full-time operators who guide the devices from the ground, he said. It hopes to begin flights later this year.

The company will be using an aircraft made by Velary, which is based in Washington, DC, and Ireland. Its Lift 10, which has eight propellers, is powered by a gasoline engine and can stay aloft for longer than battery-driven devices and haul heavier loads. — Bloomberg

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Drones , Miami , technology

   

Next In Business News

Perodua teams up with PETRONAS Dagangan and Gentari to improve services and EV support
Karex 1Q net profit tumbles 73.4% to RM1.4mil
DRB-Hicom focuses on digital transformation
FBM KLCI falls for third day, weighed down by Tenaga, YTL stocks
Oil prices climb as geopolitical tensions outweigh US inventories
Indonesian rupiah at three-month low; Asia stocks drop on Russia-Ukraine tensions
PM Anwar: Value of Malaysian business ventures in Vietnam exceeds US$13bil
Bank Rakyat issues inaugural RM500mil Asean sustainability SRI sukuk
China to beef up offshore wind power
Dyson dials back Malaysia hairdryer operations, redeploys staff

Others Also Read