According the Government’s consultation response ‘Unlocking the UK’s High Tech Economy: Consultation on the Safe Use of Drones in the UK’ published last month, Goldman Sachs predicted in 2016 that the total spend on drones in construction, agriculture insurance and infrastructure inspection between 2016 and 2020 would be almost $20bn.
This would be matched by predicted retail and consumer global sales in 2020 of 7.8million drones, totalling around $3.3bn. PwC estimate that the global drone application market will be worth over £100bn by 2025.
Peter Heap, senior recruitment consultant in the Aerospace and Defence division at Jonathan Lee Recruitment explained: “Advances in smart technologies and a rapid rise in applications for UAVs has prompted a significant increase in demand for engineers to support the industry.
“One of the key drivers in the market is safety; the desire to remove pilots from hazardous situations, but they are proving valuable in a wide range of applications. These include military surveillance, planning search and rescue missions in isolated geographical locations, recording and monitoring coastal erosion, analysing geographical changes to plan flood defences and supporting inspection and predictive maintenance programmes in agriculture, forestry, construction and for energy and transport infrastructure,” Heap continues.
“With roles ranging from maintenance technicians, pilots, operators, design engineers, systems engineers and software engineers, the industry is keen to recruit ex-forces professionals with operational experience in hazardous environments or anyone from a military or defence environment, will have the life experience and skill-set needed for these demanding roles.
“For the many HM Forces engineers entering civilian life and indeed, anyone with an aerospace engineering background with an emphasis on technical compliance and safety, prospects in the UAV sector have never been better.”
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