FAA bars drones over U.S. military bases

Flights of nearly all unmanned aircraft, or  drones, have been banned over 133 U.S. military facilities due to security concerns over the use of unauthorized drones, the FAA has said. The move came as U.S. officials and the country’s private sector worry about the possible use of dangerous or hostile  drones at locations such as military bases, airports and sports stadiums. The FAA and U.S. Defense Department agreed to restrict  drone flights within the boundaries of the military facilities effective April 14, the FAA said in a statement. This marked the first time the FAA had instituted airspace restrictions that specifically applied only to  drones, the agency said.

The facilities include bases and testing centers across the United States . The FAA said it was considering additional requests from federal security and intelligence agencies for  drone restrictions. The FAA previously banned all  drones from a 15-mile radius of Reagan National Airport near Washington that covers the Pentagon and U.S. government facilities. They are also banned drones around major sports stadiums when games take place.

Last month, the FAA said it estimated the fleet of small hobbyist  drones would more than triple from an estimated 1.1 million vehicles in 2016 to more than 3.5 million by 2021. The agency also estimated the commercial  drone fleet would grow from 42,000 at the end of 2016 to about 442,000 aircraft by 2021. The FAA said there could be as many as 1.6 million commercial  drones in use by 2021.

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