It is with great sadness that the Directors of ARPAS-UK would like to inform the membership of the death of Gavin Wishart, our previous Chairman (2018-20).
He was a graduate of Edinburgh, Loughborough and Kings College Universities in Engineering and Defence Studies. He was an Engineering Officer, serving 26 years with the RAF, retiring as a Group Captain. He went on to work for Qinetiq, and founded his own businesses, including Aviation Systems Group Ltd. It was through ASG that he came across ARPAS-UK, joined and went on to stand for election to Chairman in the great snowy AGM of March 2018. He remained Chairman until December 2020 when ill health forced him to step down.
As Chairman he championed the UK drone industry and in particular the ARPAS-UK Membership in discussions with stakeholders at all levels. He engaged with people at trade shows, as well as the media, always prepared to talk, be positive about the drone industry and negotiate on the industry’s behalf. He continued to engage and interact with the aviation and drone communities until very shortly before his death.
Gavin always had a smile on his face, enjoyed building his own projects, was interested in all he undertook and was a great person to work with and for.
Gavin died peacefully, surrounded by his family. Our thoughts go out to Joanna, his wife, and their three children.
Gavin Wishart 1958-2021
SAM IS ....
Dronecloud and Frequentis collaborate to integrate drone platform with ATC systems
Dronecloud, the drone Flight Management Software provider, has selected Frequentis to join a consortium that will collaborate on the development of open standard integrations to help unlock Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) Drone flights in the UK. Frequentis will support Dronecloud and the consortium with its vast and extensive experience in deploying its unmanned traffic management (UTM) solution – MosaiX UTM. This solution provides the air traffic control (ATC) front-end application and the Common Information Service (CIS) cloud platform during project execution.
The intuitive tower application, smartSIS, developed by Frequentis with the strong involvement of user interface experts in close cooperation with air traffic controllers (ATCOs), allows airspace rules and restrictions to be set fairly for all airspace users. The solution provides an integrated air situation picture and supports real-time decision-making. In addition, the MosaiX UTM includes a foundation for U-space (unmanned airspace) services and the CIS function, serving as the “single source of truth” for relevant safety information to reach connected stakeholders.
As part of Project Rise field trials, Cranfield Airport will be trialling Dronecloud and Frequentis’ integration in parallel with ATC. Robert Abbott, Director of Aviation Operations at Cranfield University, said: “Cranfield Airport is excited to be supporting Cranfield University and other consortium members on Rise and further expropriation of utilisation with other drone and UTM systems. Cranfield Airport is looking forward to trialling Dronecloud and Frequentis as part of this important research project.” Dr Saba Al-Rubaye (Principal Investigator), Senior Lecturer in Autonomous and Connected Systems at Cranfield University added: ”We’re delighted to be part of the Project Rise team, and welcome Frequentis to the project. Together we are working to address the challenge of establishing reliable data and communication systems for unmanned aerial operations and their safe operation with manned aircraft in the same airspace.”
“The key to unlocking the full potential of drones is allowing them to fly beyond visual line of sight,” says Guenter Graf, Frequentis Vice President Business Development. “To operate under these conditions both manned aviation and drones must have access to a shared air situation picture. Together with Dronecloud and other consortium members we intend to demonstrate an Unmanned Traffic Page 2 | 3 Management ecosystem, incorporating end-to-end communication and an approval process between drone operators and air traffic control authorities.”
Dronecloud is leading the Project Rise consortium, formed as part of the Future Flight Challenge funded by UK Research and Innovation, through the multi-billion-pound Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund. The consortium is composed of key industry partners, including Frequentis, Sky-Drones, Cranfield University and Skyports. The project is part of an overall effort across the drone industry to integrate disparate systems at scale, to achieve safer, more reliable and auditable drone flights, even beyond the line of sight.
Frequentis already has extensive experience with the integration of air traffic management (ATM) and UTM, and is currently implementing the first UTM system in the Nordic region, for Norway’s Avinor Air Navigation Services. This is the first UTM system to receive Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) approval for implementation. The company is also the largest industry partner in the Austrian AIRLabs project, aiming to build and operate test sites for Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS), covering all development stages from simulation to actual state-of-the-art BVLOS drone missions.
“Welcoming Frequentis to Project Rise was a natural fit. Frequentis brings a proven track record in delivering safety critical systems for Air Traffic Control and other airspace managers. Combined with Dronecloud and the other consortium partners, we are developing a standardised, automated digital flight approval solution ready to unlock BVLOS flights, safely at scale. This in turn will form one of the backbone elements of the eventual ‘System of Systems’ the industry will need to offer increasing levels of automation and autonomy. If we get these critical building blocks right, the hype around drone-based last-mile delivery in built up areas, and Urban Air Mobility will become reality,” Dronecloud Co-founder and CEO, Jan Domaradzki.