China's illegal high-altitude drone flights raise aviation safety concerns

Chinese authorities are cracking down on illegal high-altitude drone flights that have reached over 8,000 meters, nearing passenger aircraft paths. Videos exposed on social media show drones flying in Hunan and Guangdong provinces, sometimes just hundreds of meters from commercial planes. Regulators face a dilemma in balancing low-altitude economy growth with aviation safety.

China's rapid advancement in drone technology is clashing with aviation safety regulations. Recently, a content creator on Douyin, China's version of TikTok, exposed a drone pilot who repeatedly posted videos of drones climbing above 8,000 meters over the provinces of Hunan and Guangdong—some of China's busiest commercial air corridors—using forged flight-approval documents.

Chinese regulations limit light drones to 120 meters altitude. Operations above that require formal airspace approval, and only licensed drone pilots can apply. Unauthorized flights beyond the 120-meter ceiling, known as “black flying” in China, are illegal.

By matching footage with flight dates, altitude readings, and commercial air routes, the blogger found the drone had come dangerously close to multiple passenger aircraft, in some cases as little as 200 to 500 meters away. One Shenzhen–Beijing flight could have passed within five meters of the drone’s projected path.

“If you ever look out a plane window and see a drone, that’s no longer a joke,” the blogger warned. One of the illegal flight zones—above the city of Yingde in Guangdong—lies directly beneath key flight paths for major Greater Bay Area airports, with planes passing every few minutes.

Hunan police have opened an investigation. The controversy highlights the regulatory dilemma China faces as it pushes to develop a low-altitude economy while ensuring aviation safety. Industry insiders say that with technological progress and upgraded oversight, China may eventually allow drones to fly as high as 6,000 meters.

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Photo illustrating the suspension of operations at Berlin's BER airport caused by a drone sighting, with empty runways and diverted flights.
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Drone sighting halts berlin airport operations for two hours

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A drone sighting led to a nearly two-hour suspension of flight operations at Berlin's main airport BER on Friday evening. Numerous flights were diverted, including those from Stockholm, Antalya, and Helsinki. Security authorities lifted the alert after one hour and 50 minutes.

China's National People's Congress Standing Committee has approved revisions to the Civil Aviation Law, effective July 1. The changes explicitly target drones for the first time, addressing long-standing safety regulation gaps while guiding the growth of the drone industry.

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A Chinese army drone equipped with a standard infantry assault rifle achieved a 100% hit rate in flight trials against a human-sized target at 100 meters. The system, hovering at 10 meters, fired 20 single rounds, all striking a standard 50cm by 50cm chest board.

In the latest development of the probe into alleged drone flights into North Korea, a joint police and military team imposed travel bans on January 23 on three civilian suspects, following raids earlier in the week. The action targets the same individuals linked to incursions claimed by Pyongyang in September 2025 and January 4, 2026, amid South Korea's denial of military involvement.

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Hong Kong police will expand drone patrols to all major regions starting Friday, including The Peak, Cheung Chau and Lamma Island, for crime prevention, crowd control and traffic monitoring. This second phase joins existing operations in Heung Yuen Wai and Kowloon West to further test drone capabilities.

Recent legal revisions have made it difficult to scatter propaganda leaflets into North Korea, effectively ending the era of such campaigns, the unification ministry said. The spokesperson expressed hope that the measures could restore inter-Korean ties and build peace.

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Earlier this month, Japanese fighter jets flew close to a People's Liberation Army aircraft carrier group during military exercises near Japan, sparking mutual accusations of provocation. Beijing claimed the Japanese aircraft disrupted the drills, while Tokyo accused China of instigating the incident. The episode has once again spotlighted China's mainstay carrier-based fighter, the J-15, in service for over a decade and often patrolling hotspots like the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.

 

 

 

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