Skip to main content

Amsterdam Drone Week 2023: prep for take-off

The fifth edition of the event takes place at RAI Amsterdam from 21-23 March 2023
By Alan Dron February 6, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Amsterdam Drone Week: special showcase area will be the centrepiece (© J P | Dreamstime.com)

Amsterdam, Paris and Japan will demonstrate their plans for advanced air mobility (AAM) as one of the highlights of this year’s Amsterdam Drone Week exhibition.

The fifth edition of the event, which takes place at RAI Amsterdam from 21-23 March, will once again be held alongside the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) High Level Conference on Drones. 

This year’s theme is ‘Innovative Air Mobility connecting Cities and Regions’. AAM is being mooted not only as a means of ultra short-range citywide hops for passengers – for example from a city centre to an airport -  but also as a means of delivering urgent supplies to areas where road infrastructure is poor or no airstrips exist.

Medical supplies are already being distributed in this way in several African nations. Innovative air mobility will also connect more remote communities with economic opportunities within cities. 

Within individual cities’ plans for AAM, Amsterdam is investigating what food delivery can add as a service in crowded areas and a pilot programme is already underway. 

Paris, in turn, is focusing on flying medical, cargo and passenger transport during the 2024 Olympic Games. Pilot testing has already begun and the goal will be to establish two flight paths to fly in the densely-populated city during the international event.

Japan, meanwhile, will start flying unmanned drones at the end of this year after a successful testing period. No pilots are involved while these drones fly freely over people in urban areas. The Japanese government is now preparing for flying cars at the Osaka Expo in 2025.

The EASA Conference’s central theme is 'Back to the future of safe UAS operations'. Highlights of the programme, where the global UAM community traditionally makes an appearance, are the UAS Regulation implementation with an extensive review of lessons learned, challenges and opportunities, the building of an IAM ecosystem and setting up a realistic implementation programme implementation, but also implementing U-space and airspace integration steps.

Amsterdam Drone Week will have as a centrepiece a special showcase area where companies and organisations can show their UAV or drone applications to the press and public. The Solutions Pavilion is built around the pillars Inspection & Maintenance, Public Safety & Emergency Services, Security & Counterdrones, Surveying & Mapping and Last Mile Logistics.

Related Content

  • March 16, 2020
    Nasa challenges partners to take flight 
    Nasa has partnered with 17 aviation companies to carry out a series of technology demonstrations as part of its Urban Air Mobility (UAM) Grand Challenge in 2022. 
  • March 13, 2019
    Indra launches Air Drones solution to manage UAV traffic
    Indra is launching Air Drones, a set of solutions for managing air traffic for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) at local, regional and national territories. The company says Air Drones is designed to ensure the safety of air operations for drones that fly in densely populated urban environments, rural areas and near airports, where security requirements are strict. Indra’s new Unmanned Traffic Management (UTM) system will organise all the traffic, identifying each aircraft and controlling its access a
  • March 31, 2021
    Israel to remedy congestion with drones
    Israel Innovation Authority promotes Delivery as a Service in urban aerial transport network
  • September 5, 2019
    Volocopter pilots air taxi at Helsinki
    Volocopter has trialled an air taxi at the Helsinki International Airport in Finland, integrating into the air traffic management (ATM) and unmanned aircraft traffic management (UTM) system. Within the Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR) Programme, this demonstration is the final part of the Gulf of Finland (GOF) U-Space project showing how ATM and UTM systems enable urban air mobility (UAM). Maria Tamm, project coordinator from Estonian Air Navigation Services, says rules for using very low-level ai