If you pilot a drone heavier than 250 grams (0.55 pound) in China,Music Archives you'll have to register with authorities.
That's due to a new registration policy that aims to address a recent spate of drone intrusions by amateur pilots.
SEE ALSO: China's police are now shooting down drones with radio-jamming riflesFour drones grounded 60 flights in China, leaving 10,000 passengers stranded in April this year, and nearly 200 intrusions by drones were reported at a Chongqing airport over four hours on May 12.
Pilots will have to register their real names with the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) online from June 1, according to state-owned Xinhua.
China's aviation regulators are also seeking to create data-sharing platforms and platforms to verify registrations -- which will be connected to apps that control drones, Xinhua reported.
"We need to understand complicated situations when it comes to managing drones," Wang Zhiqing, a CAAC deputy administrator, told Xinhua. Monitoring drones can be a huge challenge given how cheap drones are and how difficult it was to establish a registration system, he added.
The CAAC has considered implementing the registration system since last year, according to various local reports. It had previously required operators of drones that are more than 7kg (15 pounds) to license their drones, according to a draft law issued in 2015.
The rules have yet to become binding -- but they stipulate that drones must keep out of restricted airspace and follow rules set by the military and government. Drones must also have their weight, maximum altitude, and place of manufacture registered before taking off.
Analysts say that the rules have been a long time coming, according to the South China Morning Post.
"Real-name registration will guide the drone industry in China towards a healthy development," Sophie Pan, an analyst at IDC China, a market research firm, told the South China Morning Post.
The market for drones in China is expected to reach 7.5 billion yuan ($10.9 million) by 2025, according to iResearch. Still, the policy is expected to dampen drone sales.
Nearly all drones weigh more than 250g, which would mean all drones in the China market would have to go through registration, Pan said.
Topics Government
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Miley Cyrus tells Howard Stern why she can't tour at the moment, and much more
Apple trapped me on iOS — perhaps forever
Facebook will testify before Congress on Russian interference in 2016 election
Bored driver takes playing with a yo
Netflix prices are going up again
The fat bears are already extremely fat
The hysterical nods to video games you missed on 'Rick and Morty'
Watch how an old Venus spacecraft tumbled before crashing to Earth
Microsoft launches mobile preview for Edge, the browser no one uses
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。