Increased Usage In Surveillance and Protection
Some drones are aircraft operated without pilots on board. Those drones are engaged for surveillance, data collection and combatting threats without concerns about hostage situations or the safety of the pilot. The demand for UAVs is constantly increasing for border patrols, as well as for paramilitary units and police to fight drug trafficking and other crimes.
UAVs have seen wide adoption across many military applications, including air strikes, surveillance, traffic monitoring, rescue and search operations, bomb threats, hostage situation control and fugitive tracking. UAVs do not pose any threat to human lives, as government agencies are adopting this technology to counter critical situations.
Increased Usage In Agriculture
The agriculture industry is one of the major sectors to have benefited from the use of UAVs. Drones can map areas quickly and spray water on crops or fertilize fields.
Robotic drones with sensors compile a large sum of the big data that farmers can use to manage risk and increase agility. In fact, in Japan, one-third of the rice fields are tended by robotic helicopters. Drones also prove to be cost-effective, as they use fewer chemicals.
Increased Usage In Unmanned Underwater Vehicles For AI And Navigation
The need for unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) is driven primarily by safety. When more UUVs are put into operation, fewer humans are required to work in risky underwater environments, in manned submarines or with diving gear. The Navy uses UUVs to counter mine warfare, locate submerged obstacles and wrecks, map ocean floors and photograph underwater archeological sites.
Maritime industries also use UUVs for offshore oil production and exploration. The offshore oil industry often operates in deep and dangerous coastal waters, so the risk to human lives is severe. Robotic underwater vehicles help the industry save money and keep its workers safe by remotely maintaining and inspecting pipelines, cleaning up debris and assisting in drilling. This trend is expected to continue for the next five years, fueling demand for UUVs for both military and commercial purposes.
Increased Usage In Military
Drones are deployed to carry out certain operations, including data collection, surveillance and missile combats to minimize threats to the lives of army personnel. In terms of surveillance, UAVs can travel across borders with ease without putting the lives of humans at risk. Their ability to loiter over targets permits them to monitor patterns of life, provide 24/7 surveillance data, recognize and track potential threats and establish the best suitable time to strike to avoid civilian casualties.
In terms of fatal use of force, drones help tackle and even eliminate missiles, reducing collateral damage in comparison to other weapons systems. Drones provide a pin-prick, limited, covert strike to avert widening the war zone. In addition, the removal of pilots from combat zones completely eliminates the threat to pilots' lives. Drones are operated from facilities that are far away from the combat location, which helps their operators make better targeting decisions, as they do not have to fear for their own safety. Drones also help diminish the number of civilian casualties, a factor that helps drive the market.
Increased Usage In News Broadcasting
Many news agencies deploy drones to capture and broadcast events, a task that has been proven to be easy and economical. Drones are equipped with cameras that can fly lower and into smaller areas, which is not possible using larger manned aircrafts. Helicopters only provide wide aerial views during high-speed chases, whereas drones viewers get a look out of the drivers-side window of a speeding car on the news.