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#105 Ben Ivers, Boeing: Airspace modernization

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Manage episode 524549384 series 3617746
Content provided by Jim Barry, Peter Shannon & Luka Tomljenovic, Jim Barry, Peter Shannon, and Luka Tomljenovic. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jim Barry, Peter Shannon & Luka Tomljenovic, Jim Barry, Peter Shannon, and Luka Tomljenovic or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, we sit down with Ben Ivers (Boeing’s Director of Emerging Technologies & Regulatory Strategy) to unpack a deceptively simple idea: airspace modernization isn’t optional anymore and the tech to enable “automated flight rules” (AFR) is largely ready today. Ben argues the hard part isn’t the technology, but introducing a new flight mode alongside VFR and IFR that can scale drones, eVTOLs, and future autonomous operations without turning the sky into sanitized corridors reserved for “new entrants.” He explains why Boeing is forced to think in decades and why action now matters if modernization isn’t to remain perpetually out of reach.

We get practical on what AFR actually means: less “AI making decisions,” more machine-guided coordination built on trusted data exchange and automated conflict management. Ben connects AFR to UTM/U-space (“crawl, walk, run”), walks through “before vs after” scenarios across GA, airlines, drones, and urban air mobility, and pinpoints the real bottlenecks, i.e. reliable communications, latency, surveillance, micro-weather, and certified digital services. We close on where value may accrue in a digitized airspace: new third-party services, higher throughput, and an “additive” roadmap that grows the aviation ecosystem rather than excluding parts of it.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. #105 Ben Ivers, Boeing: Airspace modernization (00:00:00)

2. Automated Flight Rules Are Ready Now (00:03:11)

3. Role at Boeing and Industry Insights (00:07:42)

4. Biggest Misconceptions Around Autonomous Flight Rules (00:17:55)

5. AFR Summarized (00:20:51)

6. Difference Between AFR and UTM (00:23:58)

7. The Before And After of AFR (00:32:18)

8. The Future of Air Travel: Reducing Commute Times (00:36:39)

9. AFR Success Metrics (00:37:22)

10. SkyGrid sponsor segment (00:38:35)

11. Economic Opportunities in Digitized Airspace (00:44:35)

12. Challenges and Future of Automated Flight Rules (00:49:31)

13. Boeing's Obligation To Look To The Future (00:54:11)

105 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 524549384 series 3617746
Content provided by Jim Barry, Peter Shannon & Luka Tomljenovic, Jim Barry, Peter Shannon, and Luka Tomljenovic. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jim Barry, Peter Shannon & Luka Tomljenovic, Jim Barry, Peter Shannon, and Luka Tomljenovic or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode, we sit down with Ben Ivers (Boeing’s Director of Emerging Technologies & Regulatory Strategy) to unpack a deceptively simple idea: airspace modernization isn’t optional anymore and the tech to enable “automated flight rules” (AFR) is largely ready today. Ben argues the hard part isn’t the technology, but introducing a new flight mode alongside VFR and IFR that can scale drones, eVTOLs, and future autonomous operations without turning the sky into sanitized corridors reserved for “new entrants.” He explains why Boeing is forced to think in decades and why action now matters if modernization isn’t to remain perpetually out of reach.

We get practical on what AFR actually means: less “AI making decisions,” more machine-guided coordination built on trusted data exchange and automated conflict management. Ben connects AFR to UTM/U-space (“crawl, walk, run”), walks through “before vs after” scenarios across GA, airlines, drones, and urban air mobility, and pinpoints the real bottlenecks, i.e. reliable communications, latency, surveillance, micro-weather, and certified digital services. We close on where value may accrue in a digitized airspace: new third-party services, higher throughput, and an “additive” roadmap that grows the aviation ecosystem rather than excluding parts of it.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. #105 Ben Ivers, Boeing: Airspace modernization (00:00:00)

2. Automated Flight Rules Are Ready Now (00:03:11)

3. Role at Boeing and Industry Insights (00:07:42)

4. Biggest Misconceptions Around Autonomous Flight Rules (00:17:55)

5. AFR Summarized (00:20:51)

6. Difference Between AFR and UTM (00:23:58)

7. The Before And After of AFR (00:32:18)

8. The Future of Air Travel: Reducing Commute Times (00:36:39)

9. AFR Success Metrics (00:37:22)

10. SkyGrid sponsor segment (00:38:35)

11. Economic Opportunities in Digitized Airspace (00:44:35)

12. Challenges and Future of Automated Flight Rules (00:49:31)

13. Boeing's Obligation To Look To The Future (00:54:11)

105 episodes

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