Amazon’s Drones Exiled to Canada
Refusing to move at the speed of
bureaucrats, an impatient Jeff Bezos heads north of the border.
By L. Gordon Crovitz in the Wall Street Journal
Jeff Bezos is known for refusing to
suffer fools. His reported put-downs include: “Why are you wasting my life?,”
“Are you lazy or just incompetent?” and “I’m sorry, did I take my stupid pills
today?” Imagine someone as impatient as the Amazon CEO being forced to move at
the speed of bureaucrats.
This explains Amazon’s decision to
take on the Obama administration’s Federal Aviation Authority. The FAA is years
late in approving commercial use of drones and has violated numerous
congressional deadlines. Mr. Bezos says regulatory inertia—not massive
R&D—is blocking Amazon’s futuristic plan to have low-flying vehicles
deliver within 30 minutes the 85% of its packages weighing less than five
pounds.
When Mr. Bezos went on “60 Minutes”
in 2013 to announce Amazon Prime Air, many thought he was joking. It’s now
clear his appearance was just the first high-profile effort to pressure
Washington to allow this next new thing.
Last month Amazon poked the FAA
again. The agency had added insult to injury by granting Amazon a useless certificate
to test a model of drone that R&D had made obsolete. The company’s head of
global public policy, Paul Misener, told the Senate aviation subcommittee on
March 24 that in the six months it took the FAA to approve the testing, “We’ve
moved on to more advanced designs that we already are testing abroad.”
The next week, the Guardian
published an article by reporter Ed Pilkington, who was granted access to
Amazon’s secret testing facility at a location 2,000 feet across the border in
Canada.
“The largest Internet retailer in the world is
keeping the location of its new test site closely guarded,” the Guardian
reported. “What can be revealed is that the company’s formidable team of
roboticists, software engineers, aeronautics experts and pioneers in remote
sensing—including a former NASA astronaut and the designer of the wingtip of
the Boeing 787—are now operating in British
Columbia.”
The Guardian said Amazon is taking
advantage of the “permissive culture on the Canadian side of the border,” while
taking the company’s “quarrel with the federal government to a new level.”
Amazon is trying to shame U.S.
regulators into action by publicizing what the Guardian calls “Amazon’s
Canadian airstrip-in-exile.”
Last year, Mr. Bezos told a business
conference, “Technology is not going to be the long pole. The long pole is
going to be regulatory.” He added, “I think it is sad but possible that the
U.S. could be late” to the benefits of drones, which are allowed to fly more freely
in Britain, Australia, Germany and Israel as well as Canada.
The FAA treats drones the way the
government once treated the Internet when it banned commercial use. This
arbitrary line was why academics and scientists were first to gain access to
the Web. The Internet became the force we know it today only when it was freed
for business use in the 1990s.
We now have the worst of all worlds:
Businesses like Amazon are not permitted to use or test drones, but hobbyists
can buy drones for a few hundred dollars and fly them without safety guidelines
that everyone agrees are needed. Rules that work well outside the U.S. limit
drone flights to under about 500 feet and require a safe distance from
airports.
The FAA in March stretched the
definition of “commercial” to catch many hobbyists. The Motherboard website
reported that the agency had sent a warning letter to Jayson Hanes, a
Tampa-based drone enthusiast, alleging he had violated the law. The problem,
according to the FAA letter, was that he had posted video from his drone to
YouTube. This transformed his hobby into unlawful commercial activity simply
because YouTube has advertisements. Mr. Hanes says he has never received any
payment from YouTube, and he estimates revenue earned on the video to be less
than a dollar.
This approach effectively
criminalizes tens of thousands of videos and photos shot by drone hobbyists and
posted online to YouTube or another advertising-based service, such as Facebook or Twitter.
The FAA recently minimized its
failure to issue commercial drone rules by saying that “proposed requirements
rely on market forces for a market that does not yet exist.” In fact, the
drones have become a large industry thanks to entrepreneurs engaging in
regulatory civil disobedience by ignoring government prohibitions. Farms,
construction sites, movie studios and newsrooms routinely use drones. This
black market is estimated to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
There are thousands of commercial
drone operators in the U.S. forced to work in the shadows. Mr. Bezos is trying
to embarrass regulators by pointing out that other countries are flying ahead
of the U.S. At least so far, these regulators have shown themselves to be
beyond shame.
Poster’s only comment:
We the people run this country and not the bureaucrats and politicians
in the end. Now do keep in mind that some politicians and some bureaucrats do a
pretty good job for we the people.
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