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Red tape grounds drone beach lifesaver

Plans for a beach drone to locate swimmers in trouble and drop a life-belt to them have been grounded by bureaucracy.

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Tests at a beach in Biscarrosse, Landes, in July, were halted due to a delay in permission to use the drone. Anthony Gavend, co-founder of drone developer Helper, told Connexion: “We were born in the wrong country. French bur­eau­cracy strangles companies like ours. We are looking to move elsewhere in Europe, or even to the US.

“We needed permission to fly a drone from a beach, but the Paris office is taking its time, which is frustrating as we know it works and can save lives.â€

The drones can be airborne in seconds after someone is spotted in difficulty, can fly at up to 80kph, and drop life-saving equipment near the swimmer.

Mr Gavend still hopes the tests will go ahead as a similar service was launched in Fuen­girola in Spain earlier this year.

The move comes as a study showed that France has 500 deaths a year due to drowing and one in six people cannot swim. Two out of three over-65s are non-swimmers but 95% of 15-24 year olds can swim as most learned at school.

Children aged 6-12 are being offered 15 hours of swimming lessons by the FFN swimming federation in a national campaign. A flat fee of €15 covers insurance and the FFNatation website lists participating clubs.