Evidence of meeting #38 for Transport, Infrastructure and Communities in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was aircraft.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Rudy Kellar  Executive Vice-President, Service Delivery, Nav Canada
Hugh Liu  Professor, As an Individual
Kamran Behdinan  Professor, As an Individual
Brian Guimond  Manager, Military Operations and Unmanned Aircraft Systems, Nav Canada

9:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair (Hon. Judy A. Sgro (Humber River—Black Creek, Lib.)) Liberal Judy Sgro

I call the meeting to order. We're now in open session. Pursuant to Standing Order 108, we continue our study of the unmanned aerial vehicle regulations. We have several witnesses with us today.

Before the witness testimony, Mr. Rayes, were you trying to get my attention?

9:50 a.m.

Conservative

Alain Rayes Conservative Richmond—Arthabaska, QC

Yes. Thank you, Madam Chair. I'd like you to clarify something for me before we get going. I want to check whether we are indeed meeting with the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities next Thursday to talk about the infrastructure bank.

9:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

Specifically you asked to invite the minister. When he's here, he will speak about the infrastructure bank, and once he's here, he'll probably speak about anything that you ask him. He's still on the schedule for next Thursday, December 15, as you requested.

9:50 a.m.

Conservative

Alain Rayes Conservative Richmond—Arthabaska, QC

That's great.

Is he going to be here for both hours of the meeting?

9:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

No, it's one hour.

9:50 a.m.

Conservative

Alain Rayes Conservative Richmond—Arthabaska, QC

Very good, so we can expect to meet with the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities next Thursday.

Will he be here for the first or second hour of the meeting?

9:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

It's for the second hour, because we're doing committee business in the first hour.

Mr. Berthold.

December 6th, 2016 / 9:50 a.m.

Conservative

Luc Berthold Conservative Mégantic—L'Érable, QC

I'd like to say something on that, Madam Chair.

With respect to the minister's appearance, we had asked you to see whether the minister could be here for the first hour of the meeting. Next Thursday will be the last time the committee meets before the holidays, and there could be votes. What's more, it's also the time when the goings-on in the House often have the effect of cutting short a witness's appearance.

We had asked you to make a different request to the minister. Do you plan to do that?

9:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

I did ask again, and it was left at, if possible, he would be here for the first hour. Apparently, I'm not sure what meetings...but he already has something. However, I did ask. If he can be here for the first hour, he's assured me that he will be, rather than the second hour.

Monsieur Aubin.

9:50 a.m.

NDP

Robert Aubin NDP Trois-Rivières, QC

In the event that the House adjourns on Wednesday or Thursday morning, can we meet with the minister during one of the committee's first meetings back in late January or early February?

9:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

I would be asking that he come to our first meeting, if possible, so that we can deal with the request from Mr. Rayes. Okay, thank you.

To our witnesses, welcome.

We have Rudy Kellar, Executive Vice-President of Service Delivery, with us. By video conference from Toronto, we have Hugh Liu, Professor, and Kamran Behdinan, Professor.

Welcome, gentlemen. My apologies for the delay, but we're very happy to have you with us today.

Mr. Kellar, would you like to start. You can introduce your colleague who's with you, Mr. Kellar.

9:55 a.m.

Rudy Kellar Executive Vice-President, Service Delivery, Nav Canada

Madam Chairman and members of the committee, thank you very much.

As mentioned, my name is Rudy Kellar. With me is my colleague Brian Guimond, who's Nav Canada's manager of military operations and unmanned aerial systems. Thank you for inviting Nav Canada to appear before the committee as part of your study into the regulations governing unmanned aerial vehicles. To us, this is an important issue, and we were pleased to see the committee decided to examine it.

For those who are not aware, Nav Canada is the private company that owns and has operated Canada's civil air navigation system for the past 20 years. We provide air traffic services, which include air traffic control, fight services, and other related services to pilots operating in Canadian airspace and international airspace delegated to Canada. We own the radars and other surveillance technologies that enable us to monitor the skies and the navigational aids used by all pilots flying in our airspace.

We are proud of our record in improving safety and efficiency in our skies and in reducing delays to passengers and aircraft operators. An act of Parliament gave us the right and responsibility to plan and manage airspace in Canada. Transport Canada retains authority to regulate us from a safety perspective, as they do with airlines and airports.

As the committee has heard over the past few weeks, the UAV industry is growing and there are applications for the technology that are quite exciting. However, it is essential that the growth occur in a way that does not undermine safety, for those currently using the skies, for those wishing to take to the skies with their UAVs, and for those on the ground.

Nav Canada has been an active participant in the Canadian aviation regulation advisory council, or CARAC, process that has been developing enhancements to the current Canadian regulatory framework governing UAV operations. We also sit on the International Civil Aviation Organization, or ICAO, remotely piloted aircraft systems panel, working on the development of international regulatory standards and recommended practices for states.

Airspace in Canada is divided into seven classes, class A through G, but can generally be thought of as separated into controlled airspace and uncontrolled airspace. On a day-by-day basis, commercial UAV operations in uncontrolled airspace are approved by Transport Canada or adhere to criteria for exemption from the approval requirement. UAV operations that have received Transport Canada approval through a special flight operating certificate, or SFOC, process to operate within controlled airspace include a requirement that their operations be coordinated with Nav Canada. They will contact one of our air traffic control facilities to work out the details of their operations so that we are aware of when and where they plan to operate. That coordination allows us to assess the risk from the proposed operation and impose restrictions as appropriate, such as limitations on altitude, hours of operation, communication, and determine the requirement, if any, for a notice to airmen to be published.

Normally, in controlled airspace, an air traffic controller's job is to use surveillance technology to know where all aircraft are and to provide control instructions for changes in altitude or heading by communicating with the pilot on the radio or through a data link connection. All control instructions are designed to keep aircraft in their airspace moving efficiently and safely separated.

There is some less busy airspace in which we provide traffic advisory services in Canada. Essentially that means ensuring pilots know where the other aircraft are in the area and what their intentions are. In this instance, it is the pilot's own responsibility to see and avoid the other aircraft once we have provided the flight information.

The integration of UAVs into the national airspace has provided unique challenges for air traffic management now and going forward. Controllers can't see the UAVs on our radar screens because the vast majority don't have transponders and are physically too small to be detected.

In those rare instances where a UAV is large enough or near enough to be detected by primary radar, the target on the radar screen looks the same as a bird would, and there is no communication available from the air traffic controller as they do not have the radio frequency, so they cannot be provided any instructions.

I think the committee has heard a lot in the past few weeks about how the technology is improving and what might be possible in the future, but today the lack of existing sense-and-avoid technology precludes complete integration of UAVs into controlled airspace, so a segregated integration concept is used to ensure flight safety.

The committee also heard about the potential of ADS-B technology to allow UAVs and pilots to see and avoid each other. Nav Canada is a world leader in the deployment of ADS-B technology. We were among the first air navigation systems in the world to use it when we deployed it around the coast of Hudson Bay in 2009 to fill a gap in radar coverage. We further deployed it up the northeast coast of Baffin. We are the majority partner in a joint venture to launch ADS-B sensors into 66 satellites, a constellation to provide the very first low-earth orbiting space-based surveillance of ADS-B. That is a global service that will provide surveillance worldwide.

It is important to recognize there are two very different types of ADS-B. There is ADS-B in and ADS-B out. With ADS-B out, the aircrafts broadcast information about their position twice every second. We have receivers in the Hudson Bay area, in the northeastern part of Canada, that capture that broadcast and provide our controllers with situational awareness, where the aircraft is at all times. ADS-B in, however, is the technology that allows the pilot in the cockpit or the UAV operator to see the other suitably equipped ADS-B aircraft around them on their own radar-like display, and in theory, take action accordingly.

While ADS-B usage has been growing, and there is a requirement that all aircraft in the United States be equipped by 2020, it is ADS-B out that they are equipping for, the broadcast capability only. No jurisdiction in the world is mandating that aircraft equip with ADS-B in, and the rates of equipage today are very low as the costs are very prohibitive for aircraft to equip.

It would, therefore, be incorrect to assume that ADS-B will, in any near term, provide the sense-and-avoid capability that will help to mitigate the risks beyond visual line of sight UAV operations. We favour further investigation regarding UAV ADS-B out equipage that would correlate with industry anti-collision equipment already installed on the majority of commercial aircraft in Canada. This is particularly important for internal airspace in and around airports.

When pilots see a UAV during flight today, they report it to Nav Canada's air traffic controllers and flight service specialists, and those reports are made available to Transport Canada through the Canadian aviation daily occurrence report, or CADORS. CADORS reports of UAV encounters were 182 last year, up from 72 the previous year, and are anticipated to continue to climb, with the majority occurring around the urban centres of Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal.

Nav Canada is a member of the CARAC, as mentioned earlier, and a member of the CARAC UAV systems program design working group. In August we submitted comments to Transport Canada on the proposed regulatory amendments designed to govern visual line of sight operations for UAVs under 25 kilograms. We have advocated for more rigorous requirements on such items as registration, operator education, training requirements and licensing, minimum age requirements, and most importantly, minimum distances to aerodromes.

In the longer term we think there is a need to examine the potential role of ADS-B technology and to consider ADS-B equipage requirements in certain airspaces in Canada for both piloted and non-piloted aircraft. Government should also be working with UAV manufacturers to implement geofencing to keep amateur UAVs away from controlled airspace and below certain altitudes.

In the meantime we believe there is a critical need now to improve enforcement capabilities and clarify legislation enabling law enforcement agencies to assist in real-time enforcement of UAV-related violations to the Aeronautics Act. Today, we understand, only the RCMP has the delegated authorities to enforce the Aeronautics Act. Local, provincial, and municipal police have no authority to enforce such violations, yet are being asked to address the issue.

Thank you. I'd be pleased to take questions when required.

10:05 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

Thank you very much, Mr. Kellar.

Mr. Liu, please go ahead.

10:05 a.m.

Professor Hugh Liu Professor, As an Individual

Good morning, and thank you for calling me to present before the committee.

My name is Hugh Liu. I'm a professor at the University of Toronto's Institute for Aerospace Studies. My own research expertise is in the area of aircraft systems and control. Regarding UAV-related research, I have made contributions in autonomous, unmanned systems development for formation flight and the co-operative control of a group of UAVs.

Our aim is to increase the UAV's scope, scalability, and flexibility by flying a number of UAVs together. For example, we have conducted successful research on wildfire monitoring in collaboration with Ontario's Ministry of Natural Resources, and we also have successfully demonstrated this through a few flight tests. We are collaborating with scientists in biology and geography for wetland inspections. As a result, we have seen great potential for UAVs in this emerging market.

In addition, I am a leading principal investigator of the collaborative research and training experience program, also called CREATE, on research and training with UAVs. This was awarded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, NSERC, back in 2015. As a result, I'm the director of the centre for aerial robotics research and education at the University of Toronto.

The program falls within the industrial stream and is a unique research and training opportunity, focused on UAVs, that will give our students, especially graduate students, the interdisciplinary research, entrepreneurial, and leadership skills needed to propel Canadian aerospace companies forward into a prosperous future in this field.

Our academic team of 11 faculty members from three universities, assembled for this program, brings the unique expertise of each member and collectively spans all key scientific and technological areas.

The strategic research training in UAVs will create a new interdisciplinary program that directly addresses the Canadian research priorities of information and communications technologies, as well as natural resources. We believe unmanned aerial vehicles hold great promise for applications as diverse as natural resource monitoring, infrastructure inspection, agriculture, mineral exploration, and so on. This is the most vibrant sector of the aerospace industry, and is growing very quickly.

Canada has a long history of leadership in aviation. We certainly hope, as academics, we can be a part of that and support the Canadian sectors and communities in developing a strategy for this emerging sector to keep our nation's interests and leading-edge advantage.

In terms of UAV regulations, it's important to maintain the aviation sector's rigorous policy and procedures to ensure safety and security are in place, yet keep an open mind so as to support the commercial applications of UAVs and to address the special features involving unmanned aerial vehicles.

It is important to identify different needs and requirements between commercial applications and consumer products, and establish separate and distinctive policies and guidelines accordingly.

Thank you.

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

Thank you very much, Mr. Liu.

Mr. Behdinan, go ahead.

10:10 a.m.

Professor Kamran Behdinan Professor, As an Individual

Good morning, Madam Chair and members of the committee. Thank you very much for the invitation.

Although my background is not in UAVs or regulations, I will be glad to help with this important cause. To give some brief background about me, I am a professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at the University of Toronto. I am the design chair for the faculty-wide Institute for Multidisciplinary Design and Innovation. Before that, I was at Ryerson University. I was the founding chair of the department of aerospace engineering at Ryerson University and the founding director at Ryerson University for aerospace design and innovation. So I have been involved with aerospace-related research and programs for a while.

Currently at the University of Toronto, we have a lot of collaboration with aerospace companies, including Bombardier, Pratt & Whitney, and other companies. My own research falls in the area of lighted structures for both aerospace and automotive applications.

In terms of the UAV, I have been lucky enough to have a collaboration with Drone Delivery Canada, which is a new company. We have run a couple of projects with them so far. One of them, which was recently in place, is for the delivery of the payload, so we are working with them on the mechanism for the delivery of the payload.

Overall, certification is a very important issue, because it has an impact on the safe operation of aircraft, including UAVs. I was looking into the background of that, the regulations that have been in place—and I believe one is going to come into effect very soon—about airspace for the drones, which has also been in practice for the past few years. I think this is very important, because this is the area that I believe has an impact on the safe operation of UAVs in general.

I'm quite supportive of any regulations that bring into play safety and the airworthiness of these aircraft, including UAVs.

Thank you very much.

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Judy Sgro

Thank you all very much. We appreciate your information.

We go on. Mr. Berthold, you have six minutes.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Luc Berthold Conservative Mégantic—L'Érable, QC

Thank you, Madam Chair.

Thank you to the witnesses for being here and educating us on such an important issue. As we know, the aviation industry is about to face a major transformation. I'm glad we have the NAV CANADA officials here today.

As far as the aviation system is concerned, you are the map of the sky, in the sense that you prevent any conflicts between air routes. I'd like to quickly come back to the systems you talked about. I'm not a technologist or an engineer. The systems you talked about, the ADS-B technologies, would appear to be very costly.

Given what you know about the market, do you think manufacturers could, in the very near term, integrate geolocation systems that would be helpful for other users, aircraft pilots and NAV CANADA?

Is the technology now at an acceptable point, where the development of this new industry would not be hindered?

10:10 a.m.

Executive Vice-President, Service Delivery, Nav Canada

Rudy Kellar

Thank you for the question.

I took this as two main questions. I think the technology is there or very close to being there for ADS-B out transponder technology, and I believe it fits within Canadian aviation and the other aircraft flying. I guess the first and foremost use would be in controlled airspace—that is, busy airspace—with the aircraft that have anti-collision detection avoidance equipment that picks up the transponder.

The manufacturing itself I don't know much about, but I'm sure that as time goes on, the skills that are out there that have put this technology to where it is today are probably quite capable of expanding, in the manufacturing stage, some form of transponder requirement as well as the registration component.

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

Luc Berthold Conservative Mégantic—L'Érable, QC

In your opinion, then, the ability to geolocate drones is absolutely crucial to the industry's development.

10:15 a.m.

Executive Vice-President, Service Delivery, Nav Canada

Rudy Kellar

Yes, it is, particularly around busy terminal airspace and airports in a controlled airspace.

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

Luc Berthold Conservative Mégantic—L'Érable, QC

I'd like to quickly address a situation in Thetford Mines, in my neck of the woods. It has a tiny airport that lacks the technology of major airports. It does, nevertheless, provide air navigation, particularly for recreational pilots.

If they were equipped with the transponders, would small planes have the ability to geolocate drones?

10:15 a.m.

Executive Vice-President, Service Delivery, Nav Canada

Rudy Kellar

That's a very good question, and a lot of Canadian airports are experiencing a high volume of smaller aircraft flight training, and a significant portion of those aircraft are not equipped to detect an anti-collision transponder from other aircraft or from UAVs. They rely on the radio communication and a visual line of sight to communicate with each other.

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

Luc Berthold Conservative Mégantic—L'Érable, QC

If I understand correctly, then, large aircraft that fly at very high altitudes are equipped for that kind of detection, but small aircraft that fly very close to drones are not equipped to detect them even with transponders. I'm talking about most small aircraft.

10:15 a.m.

Executive Vice-President, Service Delivery, Nav Canada

Rudy Kellar

Yes, I guess I would try to clarify that. There is a specific weight certification of aircraft that are flown commercially and that is dictated by the regulations in Canada for IF—instrument flight—rules. These aircraft must have anti-collision detection technology. That would be the majority of all of the commercial traffic within major Canadian airports and many smaller Canadian airports, but aircraft flying within visual flight rules, which may be independently owned or operated, do not have that technology at present.

We will be, over the course of the next several years, working with Transport Canada and Nav Canada, as well as all of the operations in Canada, flight schools included, to try to determine whether we feel ADS-B transponder equipage should be mandated in certain classes of airspace in Canada. It's unknown yet where that specifically will be and how that will be supported within industry.