Facebook Seeks Partner Countries for Drone Trials
04 October 2016 - 8:00AM
Dow Jones News
Facebook Inc. is in talks with several countries for trial
broadcasts of internet content from highflying drones, underscoring
the social media company's push to provide bandwidth to poorly
connected parts of the globe.
Several companies aim to provide bandwidth to far-flung places
that can't easily be connected by terrestrial links. Alphabet
Inc.'s Google this year ran the first tests of its "Project Loon"
that seeks to connect users via high-altitude balloons. OneWeb Ltd.
is working on a large constellation of satellites to deliver fast
global internet service from space.
But many of the projects face big obstacles. Drone and balloon
projects require approvals from national governments to operate in
their airspace. Other regulators have to approve the use of radio
spectrum to broadcast signals to the ground. That makes working
with governments crucial for the companies to succeed.
Martin Gomez, Facebook's director of aeronautical platforms,
said a number of countries may be involved in trials. "Some of the
countries that are really clamoring to host this first demo have
huge regions where there is zero or very poor internet
connectivity," he said on the sidelines of a Royal Aeronautical
Society drone conference in London.
Mr. Gomez said around 57% of the world's population still isn't
connected. The rate of growth in connecting people has slowed, he
added, suggesting "the low-hanging fruit have been plucked."
The demonstrations could take place in 2018, he said, though an
exact schedule hasn't been fixed. Facebook's drone project took a
big step forward on June 28, when it took to the air for the first
time in Yuma, Ariz. The aircraft, dubbed Aquila, which weighs less
than 1,000 pounds and has a 138-foot wingspan—larger than a Boeing
737 single-aisle plane—remained aloft for 96 minutes, more than an
hour longer than first planned.
Mr. Gomez said the first flight yielded about a terabyte of data
that has had to be analyzed before Aquila resumes flight
trials.
The vehicle eventually is intended to fly above 60,000 feet,
well above the altitude where commercial airliners cruise, and
remain aloft about three months. Battery power is the limiting
factor for the solar-powered aircraft's endurance, Mr. Gomez
said.
Facebook hasn't said when Aquila will fly again.
Aquila is only part of Facebook's strategy to boost internet
availability around the world. The Menlo Park, Calif., company had
planned to provide bandwidth to remote areas via satellite. That
initiative suffered a major setback last month when the satellite
was destroyed on the launchpad during the test of the Falcon 9
rocket designed by Elon Musk's Space Exploration Technologies
Corp., or SpaceX.
Facebook had teamed with French satellite operator Eutelsat
Communications SA to provide the service using the Israeli-made
spacecraft. After the explosion during a prelaunch test of the
SpaceX rocket, Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said he was
"deeply disappointed."
Mr. Gomez said the space launch failure hasn't affected plans
for the drone program. The satellite was intended to beam signals
to even more sparsely populated regions than markets the drone is
intended to serve.
Drone experts said that getting an international agreement for
drone use across borders remains years away. Regulators in Europe
and the U.S. are still sorting out how to safely permit such
operations.
"We all know we have a colossal regulatory burden ahead of us,"
Mr. Gomez said.
The flight trials in the coming years are largely aimed at
convincing regulators the unmanned planes are safe to operate and
reliable. "My goal is to get us to the point where we have an
airplane airborne all the time," Mr. Gomez said.
Write to Robert Wall at robert.wall@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 03, 2016 16:45 ET (20:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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