Drone & Aerial Photography — 2026-05-22
DJI fires back at Ontario's Chinese drone ban, calling it a country-of-origin decision lacking evidence—marking the freshest flashpoint in an escalating global regulatory war around the Chinese drone giant. On the U.S. regulatory front, the Drone Service Providers Alliance is pressing the FAA to use its newly dropped Section 2209 NPRM to preempt a patchwork of 25 state airspace laws, as a 60-day public comment window opens on critical infrastructure flight restrictions. Aerial photographers and commercial pilots have a lot to watch this week.
Drone & Aerial Photography — 2026-05-22
Gear News
No major new hardware launches crossed the freshness cutoff this week. The pipeline of anticipated DJI releases continues to be shaped primarily by U.S. FCC restrictions limiting new product launches in the American market. Existing models—including the Mavic 4 Pro, Air 3S, and Mini 5 Pro—remain the go-to choices for professional and consumer photographers.
Stay tuned: DroneXL's ongoing DJI rumors page tracks upcoming product leaks, though nothing confirmed has landed after May 15.
Regulation Watch
DJI Pushes Back on Ontario's Chinese Drone Ban
In the most significant regulatory development of the week, DJI has formally responded to Ontario's decision to ban Chinese-made drones, calling it "a country-of-origin decision without proven evidence." The company cited seven years of security audits and warned that the ban carries real public safety costs—arguing that public safety agencies relying on DJI equipment could face operational gaps with no clear alternative.

Ontario's move is part of a broader pattern: earlier this year, Beijing itself banned new consumer drone sales in China's capital, and the U.S. FCC restrictions have blocked DJI's newest product lines—the Lito series—from launching in the American market. The Ontario decision signals that this regulatory wave is now spreading to Canadian provinces.
FAA Section 2209 NPRM: Industry Has 60 Days to Shape Critical Infrastructure Rules
The FAA dropped its long-awaited Section 2209 NPRM on May 5—nine years after a January 2017 congressional deadline—and it is now drawing urgent attention from industry groups. The proposed rule would create a new airspace designation called the Unmanned Aircraft Flight Restriction (UAFR), restricting drone operations near fixed-site critical infrastructure facilities.

Airsight describes it as creating "new airspace restrictions for critical infrastructure sites," with operators and owners of facilities able to apply for flight restriction zones around their properties.
DSPA Urges FAA to Preempt 25 State Drone Laws via Section 2209
With the NPRM now open, the Drone Service Providers Alliance (DSPA) is pressing the FAA to use the rulemaking to invalidate a patchwork of critical infrastructure airspace laws across 25 states. The DSPA argues that inconsistent state-by-state rules create an unworkable environment for commercial operators and that federal preemption is urgently needed.

This push was already underway before the cutoff date—the DSPA's formal comments were submitted in mid-May, just as the 60-day window opened.
Shot of the Week
DJI SkyPixel 2025 Competition Winners
The 11th Annual DJI SkyPixel photo and video competition wrapped up in April, showcasing spectacular aerial photography submitted between November 27, 2025 and March 10, 2026. While the announcement (April 27) falls just outside this week's window, the winning images are circulating widely in aerial photography communities right now.

The competition highlights techniques ranging from long-exposure drone captures to precise symmetry framing over urban and natural landscapes. For photographers looking for inspiration, the SkyPixel winners gallery is worth bookmarking as a benchmark for what's achievable in modern aerial work.
Note: Hardware news was limited this week as DJI's newest product lines (Lito series) remain blocked from U.S. and several international markets pending regulatory clearance. All gear and regulation stories reflect information published or updated after May 15, 2026.
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