Environmental & Neighbor Considerations
Drift is the biggest issue. Real scenario: Operator sprays field 100 meters from neighbor's organic vegetable farm. Wind shift causes 20% of spray to drift onto neighbor's crop. Neighbor sues for CA$25,000 (maximum individual penalty under the Aeronautics Act) (crop loss + organic certification loss). Insurance handles claim, but operator's reputation is damaged. How to mitigate:- Drift prediction: Use weather data (wind speed, direction, temperature, humidity) to calculate expected drift radius.
- Buffer zones: Don't spray within 100+ meters of non-target areas (depends on chemical, drift patterns).
- Notification: Inform neighbors 48 hours before spraying (courtesy, sometimes legally required).
- Timing: Spray in calm wind conditions (early morning, late evening, <10 kph wind).
- Equipment: Use low-drift nozzles (wider spray pattern reduces boom height, minimizes exposure).
- Documentation: Log all spray operations (date, time, weather, chemicals, target area, drift assessment).
FAQ: Agricultural Drone Canada
Q: Can I spray crops without Transport Canada approval?A: No. Using a drone for any commercial purpose (including spraying your own fields for crop business) requires RPOC. Penalty for operating without RPOC: CA$5,000–$10,000 per flight.
Q: What's the difference between agricultural drone and regular drone?A: Agricultural drones are purpose-built: larger tanks (5–30 liters), reinforced frames, anti-corrosion materials (chemicals are corrosive), specialized nozzles. Regular drones (DJI Air 3, Matrice 300) can do monitoring, not heavy spraying. For spraying, you need DJI Agras, XAG, or equivalent.
Q: How much does it cost to get certified for agricultural spray?A: Level 1 Complex cert (if starting from scratch): varies depending on provider and course level–$1,950. Ag training: varies depending on provider and course level–$5,000. Pesticide license: varies depending on provider and course level–$400. RPOC (ag variant): varies consulting. Insurance (first year): CA$25,000 (maximum individual penalty under the Aeronautics Act)–$50,000. Total Year 1: CA$25,000 (maximum individual penalty under the Aeronautics Act)–$60,000. Year 2: ~CA$25,000 (maximum individual penalty under the Aeronautics Act)–$50,000 (mainly insurance).
Q: Do I need my own farm to operate?A: No. Many operators are contractors—they spray for multiple farms on a per-acre fee basis (typical: varies depending on the type and extent of work required–$30/acre). You don't need to own land; you service farms under contract.
Q: What chemicals am I allowed to spray?A: Only Health Canada-registered pest control products. Check Health Canada's Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) database. Most common herbicides, fungicides, insecticides are registered. Some newer biologics are also approved. Your supplier can advise.
Q: Can I spray at night?A: No. Standard rule prohibits night spraying (applies to all aerial application). Spray at daytime only, with 3+ km visibility, <25 kph wind. Some provinces allow early dawn or late evening (30 min after sunrise, 30 min before sunset).
Q: What if I cause crop damage with overspray?A: Your insurance covers it (if you're insured). You'd file a claim, insurer investigates, and compensates neighbor (up to policy limit). Your rates go up next year.
Q: How long before my first spray contract after getting certified?MmowW for Agricultural Operators
MmowW (CA$7.70/drone/month) includes:
- Ag operational manual templates — Spray procedures, drift assessment, chemical inventory
- Flight logging — Automatic capture of spray operations (area covered, chemicals used, weather conditions)
- Maintenance reminders — Tank cleaning, nozzle replacement, seasonal inspections
- Compliance checklist — Pesticide license renewal dates, insurance expiry, certification updates
- Incident reporting — Overspray, equipment malfunction, health issues (audit-ready)
- Level 1 Complex Pilot Certificate (12–16 weeks, CA$1,300–$1,950)
- Agricultural drone training (40–60 hours, varies depending on provider and course level–$5,000)
- Provincial pesticide applicator license (1–2 days, varies depending on provider and course level–$400)
- RPOC authorization (agricultural variant) (8–12 weeks, CA$3,000 consulting)
- Specialized insurance (CA$25,000 (maximum individual penalty under the Aeronautics Act)–$50,000/year)
Summary
Agricultural drone operations in Canada require: