KoreaTechDesk | Korean Startup and Technology News

Sun, June 14, 2026

Sign in

Virtual Demo Day
Menu
  • Home
  • Startup News
    • AI & Big Data
    • AR & VR
    • Blockchain
    • Clean Technology
    • Content & Games
    • Cybersecurity
    • Enterprise & SaaS
    • FinTech
    • Gadgets & Electronics
    • Health & Bio
    • Manufacturing
    • Press Release
    • IoT
    • Marketplaces & E-commerce
    • Robotics
    • Transportation
    • Investments
    • Ecosystem & Lists
  • Governments
    • Artificial Intelligence Industry Cluster Agency
    • Daegu Technopark
    • GANGNAM-GU
    • Gyeonggido Business & Science Accelerator
    • Hwaseong Industry Promotion Agency
    • Invest Seoul
    • Korea Creative Content Agency
    • Korea Internet & Security Agency
    • Korea Information Security Industry Association
    • Korea Institute of Startup & Entrepreneurship Development
    • Korea Tourism Organization
    • Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency
    • Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism
    • Ministry of SMEs & Startups
    • National IT Industry Promotion Agency
    • Pangyo Techno Valley
    • Seoul Business Agency
    • Seoul FinTech Lab
    • South Gyeongsang Province
    • Seoul Metropolitan Government
  • Events
    • COMEUP
    • Korea Fintech Week
    • K-Content Expo
    • NextRise
    • Try Everything
  • Interviews
    • Investors’ interviews
    • Founders’ interviews
  • Programs
    • Asan Voyager
    • CAPA Global Program
    • Campus Town Program
    • SGSC Global Bootcamp
    • Gangnam-gu Global Roadshow
    • Global SaaS Marketplace Support Project
    • LAUNCHPAD
    • COMEUP STARS 120
    • K-Startup Grand Challenge
    • TIPS X beSUCCESS Global Project
    • SFL Global Program
    • KTO Global Showcase
    • Yonsei Univ Global Class
    • KOSME Global Program
  • Partner With Us
    • Press Release
    • Startup Scouting
    • Business Agencies
    • Global Mentorship Program
    • Investment Opportunities
    • K-Scouter Program
  • Lists
  • Home
  • Startup News
    • AI & Big Data
    • AR & VR
    • Blockchain
    • Clean Technology
    • Content & Games
    • Cybersecurity
    • Enterprise & SaaS
    • FinTech
    • Gadgets & Electronics
    • Health & Bio
    • Manufacturing
    • Press Release
    • IoT
    • Marketplaces & E-commerce
    • Robotics
    • Transportation
    • Investments
    • Ecosystem & Lists
  • Governments
    • Artificial Intelligence Industry Cluster Agency
    • Daegu Technopark
    • GANGNAM-GU
    • Gyeonggido Business & Science Accelerator
    • Hwaseong Industry Promotion Agency
    • Invest Seoul
    • Korea Creative Content Agency
    • Korea Internet & Security Agency
    • Korea Information Security Industry Association
    • Korea Institute of Startup & Entrepreneurship Development
    • Korea Tourism Organization
    • Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency
    • Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism
    • Ministry of SMEs & Startups
    • National IT Industry Promotion Agency
    • Pangyo Techno Valley
    • Seoul Business Agency
    • Seoul FinTech Lab
    • South Gyeongsang Province
    • Seoul Metropolitan Government
  • Events
    • COMEUP
    • Korea Fintech Week
    • K-Content Expo
    • NextRise
    • Try Everything
  • Interviews
    • Investors’ interviews
    • Founders’ interviews
  • Programs
    • Asan Voyager
    • CAPA Global Program
    • Campus Town Program
    • SGSC Global Bootcamp
    • Gangnam-gu Global Roadshow
    • Global SaaS Marketplace Support Project
    • LAUNCHPAD
    • COMEUP STARS 120
    • K-Startup Grand Challenge
    • TIPS X beSUCCESS Global Project
    • SFL Global Program
    • KTO Global Showcase
    • Yonsei Univ Global Class
    • KOSME Global Program
  • Partner With Us
    • Press Release
    • Startup Scouting
    • Business Agencies
    • Global Mentorship Program
    • Investment Opportunities
    • K-Scouter Program
  • Lists
2026-02-25_AIS 2026_Conference Banners_1920x480
Home Startup

Airbility’s Philippines Move Shows UAV Expansion Now Depends on Local Operators

by Zee Cindy
April 27, 2026
in Startup
0

The Missing Layer in UAV Expansion — South Korea’s UAV startups are moving deeper into Southeast Asia, but recent developments suggest a shift in how that expansion is being approached. Airbility’s partnership in the Philippines highlights a practical constraint that is often overlooked in cross-border deployment. Advanced drone systems may be available, yet without trained local operators who can meet regulatory and operational requirements, deployment remains limited in real-world public-sector use.

Airbility and Danao City: A Training-First Approach to UAV Deployment

Airbility has signed a three-party Memorandum of Understanding with the Danao City Government in Cebu, Philippines, and Singapore-based KILSA Global to implement a drone pilot training program.

According to both the company’s disclosure and local government confirmation, the program begins with an approximately six-month trainer certification phase, followed by a twelve-month stage focused on technology delivery and field application.

Danao City stated that the initiative is intended to strengthen local capabilities in areas such as disaster preparedness and emergency response. The city also confirmed that participants will be nominated locally and trained using structured modules and certified instructors.

In correspondence with KoreaTechDesk, Airbility’s Co-Founder and CPO Jaehyun Lee explained the rationale behind this approach:

“Technology alone doesn’t create a sustainable market. You need local production capacity, operational infrastructure, and trained people.”

Hence, the Philippines program is positioned as addressing that final component.

Representatives of Airbility, Danao City Government, and KILSA Global pose for a commemorative photo following the MoU signing ceremony
Representatives of Airbility, Danao City Government, and KILSA Global pose for a commemorative photo following the MoU signing ceremony. | Airbility

Why Drone Training Is Becoming a Deployment Requirement in the Philippines

It is crucial to understand that he need for trained operators is never just theoretical. It is embedded in the Philippines’ aviation framework.

The Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) requires a Remotely Piloted Aircraft (RPA) Controller Certificate for commercial drone operations and for aircraft above certain weight thresholds, including those at or above 7 kilograms. Certification involves formal training, a minimum level of flight experience, and passing both written and practical assessments. And this certificate is valid for five years.

CAAP has also noted that while drone adoption is increasing, gaps remain in operator knowledge, including safety practices and compliance with aviation rules.

This creates a practical barrier. Even when drone systems are available, deployment is constrained by the availability of operators who meet regulatory standards and can operate within controlled airspace environments.

That is why, Airbility’s training-first model aligns with this requirement.

Airbility’s Danao City program shows UAV expansion in Southeast Asia now depends on trained local operators to meet regulation, safety, and deployment needs.
UAV operator illustration. | Freepik

From Training to Deployment: Building a Local Operational Pipeline

Furthermore, Airbility’s program is designed to connect training directly to deployment rather than treating them as separate processes.

Jaehyun Lee described the structure as a continuous pipeline:

“Our phased approach is designed so that training and deployment are not separate tracks but a continuous pipeline.”

Under this model, certified trainers form the base of a broader operational layer. They are expected to support field operations, train additional operators, and contribute to long-term local capability.

The company indicated that potential applications could include disaster response, infrastructure monitoring, and public-sector use cases, depending on how local needs evolve.

This reflects a shift in how UAV deployment is approached. Instead of introducing technology first and addressing operational readiness later, the program begins by preparing the people who will ultimately use the systems.

Local Context: Disaster Preparedness and Operational Relevance

Danao City’s participation adds a practical layer to the initiative.

In early 2026, the city reported that 517 families were affected by severe flooding linked to Typhoon Tino, with homes washed out and infrastructure requiring immediate rehabilitation. Local government priorities included drainage restoration, river desilting, and flood mitigation.

Against this backdrop, the introduction of drone capabilities is being discussed in relation to disaster assessment and emergency response.

While the training program may not yet guarantee deployment outcomes, it aligns with a local context where improved situational awareness and rapid assessment tools may become increasingly relevant.

Workforce as a Constraint in Southeast Asia’s UAV Expansion

Airbility’s Philippines initiative highlights a broader issue in Southeast Asia’s UAV ecosystem.

In the same correspondence, Jaehyun Lee noted:

“Even the most advanced UAV platform has limited impact if there are no qualified operators on the ground.”

He added that the operator gap is often underestimated compared to regulatory or infrastructure challenges.

This perspective is consistent with current conditions in emerging drone markets. Regulatory frameworks are evolving, and infrastructure partnerships can address connectivity challenges. However, developing a workforce that can operate, maintain, and apply UAV systems within local conditions requires time and structured programs.

This makes training not an auxiliary activity, but part of the deployment process itself.

What This Means for Korean UAV Startups Expanding into ASEAN

Korean UAV startups are expanding internationally, supported by rising exports and policy direction in advanced mobility sectors. Data from South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport shows drone exports reached KRW 36.8 billion in 2025, increasing by 58 percent year-on-year and spanning 30 countries.

However, expansion into Southeast Asia presents a different set of challenges.

Airbility’s Philippines program suggests that market entry increasingly involves building local capability rather than focusing solely on hardware delivery. In regulated environments such as the Philippines, trained operators are required not only for compliance but also for sustained operations.

For founders and investors, this signals a shift in execution strategy. Deployment depends on how effectively companies can integrate into local systems, including workforce development.

Deployment Begins with People

Airbility’s agreement with Danao City represents an early-stage step toward future UAV deployment, with the current focus placed on building the operational foundation required for that transition.

After all, technology can be introduced quickly, but operational readiness depends on people who can use it safely, legally, and effectively.

And in Southeast Asia’s public-sector environments, UAV expansion is no longer defined only by what the aircraft can do. It is also shaped by who is trained to operate it.

Airbility’s Danao City program shows UAV expansion in Southeast Asia now depends on trained local operators to meet regulation, safety, and deployment needs.
UAV operator illustration. | Freepik

Key Takeaway

  • Airbility Philippines UAV program introduces a training-first approach before deployment
  • Danao City drone training program begins with 6-month trainer certification, followed by 12-month technology and field phase
  • CAAP drone operator certification requires training, flight experience, and regulatory compliance
  • Local drone operators Philippines remain a key constraint in real-world UAV deployment
  • UAV deployment Southeast Asia depends on workforce readiness, not just technology availability
  • Korean UAV startups ASEAN expansion is increasingly linked to capability-building at local level

🤝 Looking to connect with verified Korean companies building globally?
Explore curated company profiles and request direct introductions through beSUCCESS Connect.


– Stay Ahead in Korea’s Startup Scene –
Get real-time insights, funding updates, and policy shifts shaping Korea’s innovation ecosystem.
➡️ Follow KoreaTechDesk on LinkedIn, X (Twitter), Threads, Bluesky, Telegram, Facebook, and WhatsApp Channel.

Tags: AirbilityAirbility PhilippinesCAAP drone certificationDanao City drone programdisaster response drones Philippinesdrone pilot training Philippinesdrone training ASEANdrone workforce developmenteVTOL UAVKorean UAV startupsKorean UAV startups ASEANpublic sector drone use PhilippinesUAVUAV deployment Southeast AsiaUAV operators PhilippinesUAV public safety
Previous Post

Beyond MOUs: Why Korea – EU Research Partnerships Rarely Reach Execution

Next Post

Inside Korea’s Talent Hiring Filter: Why Capability Is Just Not Enough

Next Post

Inside Korea’s Talent Hiring Filter: Why Capability Is Just Not Enough

MOST READ ARTICLE OF THE WEEK

1.
Can Your Startup Scale Without You? AsiaStartupExpo Q2 2026 Opens, Spotlighting Scalable Execution
7 Jun 2026
2.
Why Early Warning Signals Rarely Reach Decision-Makers in Korean Firms
7 Jun 2026
3.
Korea Is Buying More GPUs. The Bigger Question Is How Many Are Actually Being Used
8 Jun 2026
4.
Why Sell-Through, Not Sell-In, Decides Korean Brand Survival in the Middle East
8 Jun 2026
5.
Why Korea Is Becoming a Stress Test for Context-Aware AI
9 Jun 2026
Register for Event

AIS-2026 Conference

AIS 2026 Conference

List Article

1.
Why Good Startups Still Fail the Venture Capital Test
10 Jun 2026
2.
The Hardest Part of Korea Market Entry: Staying in The Game
3 Jun 2026
3.
Why M&A Value Is Lost After the Deal Closes
30 May 2026
4.
Foreign Companies Budget for Korea Entry, but the Real Costs Start After Hiring
23 May 2026
5.
Why Fast Korea Entry Structures Can Become Expansion Traps
16 May 2026

Similar Articles

Startup

The Real Hardware Startup Killer Isn’t Technology, It’s Supply Chain Instability

More
Startup

Inside the Gap: Why Korea’s Collaboration Model Clashes with EU R&D Rules

More
Startup

Korea – France Startup Push Meets a “Traction Gap” After Market Entry

More

Topics

Menu
  • AI & Big Data
  • AR & VR
  • Blockchain
  • Clean Technology
  • Content & Games
  • Cybersecurity
  • Enterprise & SaaS
  • FinTech
  • Gadgets & Electronics
  • Health & Bio
  • IoT

Program

Menu
  • Asan Voyager
  • CAPA Global Program
  • SGSC Global Bootcamp
  • LAUNCHPAD
  • COMEUP STARS 120
  • K-Startup Grand Challenge
  • TIPS X beSUCCESS Global Project
  • SFL Global Program
  • KTO Global Showcase
  • Yonsei Univ Global Class
  • KOSME Global Program

About

Menu
  • About Us
  • all articles
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Cookie-policy
  • twitter

Subscribe and be informed first hand about actual Korean startup news.

All the day’s headlines and highlights, direct to you every morning.

[mc4wp_form id="3766"]

Contact us : [email protected]

Topics

Menu
  • AI & Big Data
  • AR & VR
  • Blockchain
  • Clean Technology
  • Content & Games
  • Cybersecurity
  • Enterprise & SaaS
  • FinTech
  • Gadgets & Electronics
  • Health & Bio
  • IoT

Program

Menu
  • Asan Voyager
  • CAPA Global Program
  • SGSC Global Bootcamp
  • LAUNCHPAD
  • COMEUP STARS 120
  • K-Startup Grand Challenge
  • TIPS X beSUCCESS Global Project
  • SFL Global Program
  • KTO Global Showcase
  • Yonsei Univ Global Class
  • KOSME Global Program

About

Menu
  • About Us
  • all articles
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Cookie-policy
  • twitter

Subscribe and be informed first hand about actual Korean startup news.

All the day’s headlines and highlights, direct to you every morning.

[mc4wp_form id="3766"]

© 2023 Koreantech News & Media Korea Zrt. All rights reserved.

Our Spring Sale Has Started

You can see how this popup was set up in our step-by-step guide: https://wppopupmaker.com/guides/auto-opening-announcement-popups/

Our Spring Sale Has Started

You can see how this popup was set up in our step-by-step guide: https://wppopupmaker.com/guides/auto-opening-announcement-popups/

We hope you enjoy our content, May you please give us Feedback regarding our website!

[gravityform id=”17″]

dgdfgfdgdf

What you think about Koreatechdesk, Share your idea with us!

[gravityform id=”16″]

Invitation submission has been closed