Canada: Canada has released new regulations for flying recreational drones on Thursday. These rules apply to all those non-commercial drone operators, who are flying aircrafts weighing between 250 grams (about half a pound) to 35 kilograms (77 pounds). Those who found violating the regulation can face fines up to $3,000 Canadian, or about $2,248 U.S.
Thatโs almost 60 percent higher than fines in the U.S., where it tops out at $1,414. Before these new rules, Canada had a set of guidelines for flying recreational drones safely, but there were no penalties for not following them, Canadaโs Transportation Minister Marc Garneau said in a press conference today.
Under the new recreational drone rules, you canโt fly:
- Higher than 90 meters (300 ft.) above the ground
- At a distance of more than 500 meters (1,640 ft.) from the operator
- Within 75 meters (246 ft.) of buildings, vehicles, vessels, animals, people or crowds
- At night or in the clouds
- Within 9 km (5.6 miles) from the center of an airport or other facility where aircraft takeoff or within 9 km of forest fires
- If your drone doesnโt have your name, address and telephone number labeled on the aircraft
- In a way that interferes with first responders or police
Canadaโs new rules are more restrictive than U.S. recreational drone regulations, which allow for flying up to 400 feet, donโt have a set distance restriction for flying near buildings and allow for recreational flying at night.
U.S. rules also donโt have a set restriction for how far away a drone is allowed to fly from its operator, but rather require drones be kept within the operatorโs line of sight. Members of the drone industry say they didn’t see Canadaโs new regulations coming.
โIโm very surprised,โ Brendan Schulman, the head of policy at DJI, the worldโs largest drone manufacturer, said in an interview. โThere was no consultation with any relevant stakeholders before this announcement was made.โ
The order issued this morning is an interim order; according to CBC, Garneau said in a press conference that he plans to update Canadaโs drone laws more fully this summer.
The Ottawa Airport Authority called the new rules, โa necessary and welcome move,โ in a statement today. Incidents involving drones at Canadian airports have more than tripled since 2014, according to the Globe and Mail.
The 250g weight limit is likely derived from U.S. drone registration requirements and has roots in Cold War-era math. The rules also prohibit flying a drone for fun throughout large swaths of many urban areas in the country.