Gova-Media

Le corridor de test de drone humanitaire du Malawi: la plus grande zone de test de drone au monde

On 28 June 2017, a community in Kasungu in central Malawi is introduced to the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAVs) or drone technology which is being tested for transportation, connectivity and imagery. The Government of Malawi and UNICEF are launching a drone testing corridor to assess potential humanitarian use of UAVs. The corridor is the first in Africa and one of the first globally with a focus on humanitarian and development use. The launch of the UAV testing corridor follows a pilot project in Malawi in March 2016 on the feasibility of using drones for the transportation of dried blood samples for early infant diagnosis of HIV. On 29 June 2017, the Government of Malawi and UNICEF launch an air corridor to test potential humanitarian use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), also known as drones. The corridor is the first in Africa and one of the first globally with a focus on humanitarian and development use. It is centred on Kasungu Aerodrome, in central Malawi, with a 40km radius (80km diameter) and is designed to provide a controlled platform for the private sector, universities and other partners to explore how UAVs can be used to help deliver services that will benefit communities. The UAV corridor will run for at least one year, until June 2018. Since the announcement in December 2016, 12 companies, universities and NGOs from around the world have applied to use the corridor. This includes drone manufacturers, operators and telecom companies such as: GLOBHE (Sweden) in collaboration with HemoCue and UCANDRONE (Greece), and Precision (Malawi), all of which were present at the launch to demonstrate connectivity, transportation and imagery uses respectively. UAV technology is still in the early stages of development. UNICEF is working globally with a number of governments and private sector partners to explore how UAS can be used in low income countries. All projects adhere to a strict set of innovation principles, with a focus on open source and user-centere

Des plans pour le premier couloir aérien humanitaire au monde dédié aux drones avaient été annoncés en 2016. Il y a quelques semaines, le gouvernement du Malawi et l’UNICEF ont lancé le test au Malawi. Le couloir est le premier en Afrique, et l’un des premiers au monde, axé sur l’utilisation humanitaire et le développement.

Centré sur l’aérodrome de Kasungu, au centre du Malawi, avec un rayon de 40 km (80 km de diamètre), le couloir est conçu pour fournir une plate-forme contrôlée au secteur privé, aux universités et à d’autres partenaires pour explorer comment les UAV peuvent être utilisés pour aider à fournir des services qui profiteront aux communautés. C’est la plus grande zone de test de drone au monde.

Le couloir de drone servira à tester trois domaines clés essentiels à la livraison de l’aide humanitaire:

Le corridor UAV durera au moins un an, jusqu’en juin 2018, et s’appliquera de façon continue. Jusqu’à présent, 12 entreprises, universités et ONG du monde entier ont demandé à utiliser le couloir.

Vidéo illustrative

Source: Unicef

Author: Gova-Media