PolyU Hosts Landmark Low Altitude Economy (LAE) Workshop
Date:
PolyU Hosts Landmark Low Altitude Economy (LAE) Workshop, Paving the Way for Hong Kong’s Drone Innovation
Hong Kong, 2 July 2025 – The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) convened industry leaders, researchers, and policymakers for a pivotal LAE Sandbox Workshop and Public Seminar, spotlighting Hong Kong’s ambitions to become a hub for drone technology and low-altitude economic development.
Key Discussions & Outcomes
1. Sandbox Progress & Challenges:
o 38 projects are currently under Hong Kong’s LAE Sandbox Regulation, though only several flight performances have been fully implemented.
o Regulatory hurdles: Delays in AOP (Advance Operation Permit) approvals and cross-border policy misalignment (e.g., differing drone definitions, customs rules) were highlighted as critical barriers.
o Collaborative solutions: Proposals included redefining logistics drones as “flying trucks” for smoother customs clearance (inspired by DJI) and prioritizing “from suburbs to cities, goods to people” for phased regulation.
2. Industry Innovations:
o SF Express (丰翼): Revealed plans for heavy-duty drone (25kg+) trials by mid-July, with existing success in blood sample deliveries (7,000+ flights in Shenzhen).
o Cross-border logistics: A PolyU-backed project with Shenzhen Urban Transport Planning Center (SUTPC) aims to slash delivery times by 80–90% between Hong Kong and Shenzhen.
o eVTOL advancements: Companies like Aerofugia and Zero Gravity showcased electric vertical take-off aircraft, targeting 2026 for passenger trials.
3. Public Seminar Highlights:
o Safety & Infrastructure: Experts stressed the need for vertiports (22.5–30m diameter) and anti-drone systems (e.g., radar-based “black drone” detection by Beijing Racobit).
o Digital Integration: ASTRI and Gaode Map proposed unified low-altitude traffic management platforms, piloted in Shenzhen’s Longgang District.
Quotable Insights
• Kenny Lau (CTO, S.F. Express): “Hong Kong is in the 0-to-1 phase. Scalability hinges on cross-border networks—flying from Tsing Yi to Shenzhen, not just islands.”
• Cheng Xue (LAE Solution Manager, SUTPC Representative): “Commercial viability must drive sandbox projects. Round 1 lacked market focus; Round 2 needs tighter industry-government synergy.”
Path Forward
• Standardized regulations and faster AOP processing.
• Public-private pilots: E.g., medical deliveries to outlying islands (Digital Port to Lamma/Cheung Chau).
• Lab visits at PolyU’s FJ005 facility showcased prototypes like handheld mapping devices and “all-in-one” navigation systems.