Technology Today

Image copyrightXAGImage caption An XAG drone flown over a children's play park in China A group of drone experts is calling on the UK government to relax regulations on chemical spraying from the air during the coronavirus pandemic.It wants to train drone pilots from the emergency services to spray public areas with disinfectant.It has been done in China and India - but aerial spraying is largely banned in Europe.The drones can cover large areas - but there is debate around whether the method is effective.The Department of Health and Social Care said there were no plans to disinfect outside on a large scale."The expert advice is that disinfecting outdoor spaces would not be an effective use of resources," a spokesman said."We want to focus our efforts and resources on measures which have been recommended by scientific experts to have the most benefit in protecting the NHS and saving lives." At the moment, Public Health England advises decontamination only where there has been a possible or confirmed case of the virus.
The Health and Safety Executive did not comment.The Civil Aviation Authority, which oversees drone flight safety, said it was not involved in the decision.
Image copyrightHarper Adams UniversityDrone pilots would be more protected than people walking the streets or driving vans with spray equipment, because they would be further away, said Jonathan Gill, from Harper Adams University, in Shropshire, who has spent four years researching spray drones used on farm crops in several countries outside of Europe."The spray drones would keep people away from dull, dirty, dangerous jobs," he said.Media playback is unsupported on your deviceMedia captionLorries in Tehran cover a neighbourhood in disinfectantThe disinfectant would be likely to drift from its target and travel further than intended, he said, but other forms of distributing disinfectant would do the same and specialists had calculated the best type of nozzle and droplet size to target hard surfaces."Doing something is better than doing nothing," he added.Chinese Investment Connections director Robert Pearson, who has been working with Chinese company XAG, which says its drones disinfected over 902 sq km (350 square miles) in 20 provinces of China, said: "It's not one solution - but it's an important part of the arsenal." "A drone can spray 600,000 sq m a day - that's the equivalent of 100 workers."Image copyrightHarper Adams UniversityLast month, DJI announced it had adapted its agricultural drones to spray disinfectant over 3 sq km in the city of Shenzhen, including "factories, residential areas, hospitals, and waste treatment plants".But this month, a spokesman told TheIndianSubcontinent News: "The effectiveness of using drones for spraying disinfectant is still being tested".And it appears from a note on its blog the company has stopped doing it."DJI will continue to work with professionals in the medical and scientific community to offer the most effective form of assistance it can provide," it said.University of the West of England associate professor in aerospace engineering Steve Wright said UK drone laws focused on safety.And crashes and malfunctions had to be taken into account, as well as the relatively short battery life between charges."All our legislation is about the prevention of failure," he said."However, now people are working the numbers and saying, 'Is the danger of flying a drone over a public park greater than the danger of not doing it?'"In times of crisis, people's attitudes to technology completely transform."





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Samsung's best tablet drops to a less expensive rate and it comes with a £& pound; 339 giveaway For a


All Freeview television users given two-day warning and told to follow this new suggestions


All UK Gmail and Yahoo users placed on 'alert' and told to 'follow advice'


'Rare Apple Watch sale convinced me to upgrade my old SE device to one that's £& pound; 100 off'The Apple Watch Series 10 has been cut by £& pound; 100 at Argos, Currys, and Very, it's persuaded me to ditch my slow SE design for it.The Apple W


Tesco app down: Supermarket suffers huge outage as customers left unable to log in


Turn off your Sky TV box now - urgent alert issued to users across the UK


Top Tech: Save £400 on a Samsung Galaxy tablet with shopping expert's deal stack method


Everyone using Chrome needs to inspect their web internet browser now - don't ignore immediate alert


Sky Television down: Thousands not able to see television as service suffers big failure


Google confirms 'biggest' free Android upgrade in years and here's your first look


Sky announces surprise price alert and the exact date when it may affect you


Sky beats Samsung by handing out a £220 freebie with new S25 Edge phones


Amazon vacuum cleaner falls to record-low and branded 'exceptional for the price'


Apple fans can get an iPad for ₤ 10.50 a month as Sky releases brand-new offer


Lesser-known sale cutting cash off Ninja and Shark - however it ends this evening


Everyone with a Gmail account placed on red alert and warned to 'remain vigilant'


Top Tech: Samsung sale cuts Galaxy S25 to record low price as new Edge model drops


Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge pre-orders with official prices and double storage giveaway


'This 30% off power bank has a genius feature that makes it my everyday pick'


Your iPhone just got an important free upgrade from Apple - check your settings now


Your Galaxy S25 just got beaten by a radically new smartphone from Samsung


Gtech cordless vacuum that leaves floors 'pristine' has £100 off


Sky TV and broadband deal is cheapest yet - but it ends in days


All WhatsApp users placed on red alert - delete 'dangerous' new message now


Watch out Sky - brand-new UK rival includes more TV functions and is totally free to enjoy


You may be sorry for buying Samsung's Galaxy S25 after seeing what's coming this week


'Modelling is a human endeavour': Models push back rising of AI in style


Virgin Media issues crucial Wi-Fi recommendations - 5 things you 'need to do' today


'I got an AirTag for the cheapest ever price by stacking a deal most don't know about'