Blog

The Realities of Commercial Drone Ops

Written by USI | Feb 4, 2026 2:00:01 PM

In Episode 11 of The Unmanned Podcast, host Matt Hernandez leads a roundtable discussion from Commercial UAV Expo with industry leaders Calvin Reeb (Cargill), Isaac Bechet (Quanta Aviation Services), Kyle Miller (Censys Technologies), and Josh Olds (USI). Together, they break down real-world drone use cases, ROI, workforce challenges, and what Part 108 gets right—and wrong—as the industry moves toward scalable, beyond visual line of sight operations.

Q1: What drone use case has had the biggest impact on your career?

Calvin: Asset inspections. Drones let us capture detailed 3D data in hours instead of days and reuse it long after the flight.

Isaac: Mapping rights-of-way for critical infrastructure—especially before construction. It reduces truck rolls, which are one of the biggest safety risks.

Kyle: Vegetation management. Drones help identify dead or unhealthy trees before they cause accidents, outages, or fatalities.

Q2: What’s the biggest misconception about drones today?

Josh: That drones are fully autonomous. There’s still a human in the loop. We’re not at “self-flying with no oversight” yet—and that’s not a bad thing.

Q3: How do drones deliver real ROI?

Calvin: ROI isn’t just dollars. It’s:

  • Cost savings and avoidance
  • Safety improvements
  • Efficiency (getting assets back online faster)

Common high-ROI use cases include asset inspections, construction monitoring, and stockpile surveys.

Q4:  How do drones reduce risk for workers?

Isaac: We don’t have to climb towers, fly helicopters as often, or send people driving long distances. Drones' lower exposure to the most dangerous parts of the job.

Q5: What are the biggest challenges when implementing drones?

Josh: Finding the right talent, internal buy-in, and building aviation-grade processes in non-aviation industries. Every industry faces different headwinds.

Calvin: Defining success early. If you can’t clearly show value, programs get stuck in R&D forever.

Isaac: Expectation management. One drone can’t do everything. Each sensor and use case is its own specialty.

Q6:  How will Part 108 impact your operations most?

Calvin: BVLOS will allow us to cover more ground, faster, with fewer people—especially in remote areas.

Isaac: It supports scaling, but the removal of waivers creates gaps that still need to be addressed.

Q7: What did the pending Part 108 rule get right?

Kyle: Population density rules don’t align with real-world utility operations or current BVLOS waiver experience.

Isaac: Lack of ADS-B requirements, especially for heavier aircraft and right-of-way operations where helicopters are active.

Q8: What did the pending Part 108 rule get wrong

Josh: Organizational responsibility (not just individual pilots), movement toward UTM and airspace integration, and aviation-style safety systems and documentation.

Calvin: It unlocks efficiency—using aircraft the way they were designed instead of constantly repositioning.


Want more insights from industry experts?
Subscribe to The Unmanned Podcast and never miss an episode where we break down the latest in drone technology, regulations, and commercial operations.

Click Below to Watch the Full Episode