Home News ComEd Expands Drone Program with Remotely Piloted Drones

ComEd Expands Drone Program with Remotely Piloted Drones

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ComEd announced that its certified pilots will operate drones remotely from any location across northern Illinois.

Using new Skydio Drone Dock technology, ComEd crews will test remote drone monitoring solutions that will enable safe, cost-effective on-site and on-demand surveillance capabilities without dispatching trucks of crews to perform in-person inspections.

โ€œAt ComEd we are always looking for ways to improve our customersโ€™ experience and advance our storm recovery efforts. Smarter equipment monitoring is one way to proactively prevent outages and support overall grid performance,โ€ saidย Terence Donnelly, president and COO of ComEd.

โ€œThe expansion of our drone program builds upon the innovative work we have done over the last decade to strengthen and modernize our system.โ€

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), which regulates commercial drone operation, permits organizations like ComEd to request operational waivers that allow pilots to remotely operate drones without a visual line of sight.

These operational waivers will allow FAA-certified ComEd pilots to use enhanced drones to support routine equipment inspection, enabling utility crews to focus on priority grid repair and improvements.

Remote monitoring by drone will support overall grid performance by increasing ComEdโ€™s ability to rapidly inspect equipment throughout the electric companyโ€™s service territory. This will help reduce operations and maintenance costs, while helping identify potential problem areas and prevent power outages before they occur.

Remote, off-site flying capabilities will also maximize ComEdโ€™s drone pilotsโ€™ efforts by limiting the time they are physically needed in the field.

To supportย ComEdโ€™s nation-leading resiliency, routine monitoring of equipment is crucial to ensuring all grid assets are operating as intended. ComEd uses drones in a variety of ways, including to inspect power lines and following storms to assess damage and enable crews to more quickly and efficiently restore power.

Drone pilots regularly join frontline workers in the field to assist with line and equipment inspection. In 2022, ComEd also began usingย drones to support vegetation management.

The drones included in ComEdโ€™s Drone Dock program will be equipped with a high-resolution camera and thermography tools. These features will allow the drones to capture extensive data, digital images and video from all angles of grid equipment, which will then be reviewed to help preemptively address future equipment failure based on equipment conditions and environmental factors.