Latrobe council appoints drone centre delivery partner

Latrobe City Council has appointed Yarra Drones to design and establish an Advanced Air Mobility (AAM) Command Centre at Latrobe Regional Airport, supported by funding from the Victorian State Government.

The Command Centre, which will form part of the Latrobe Aerospace Technology Precinct, will primarily provide operators with facilities to research, test, and evaluate their drone technologies.

Latrobe City is a uniquely positioned as an ideal location being only 1.5 hours from Melbourne, with access to established supply chains and importantly, low population density areas within the proposed testing corridor.

The Council says the appointment marks a significant milestone in the region’s ability to support safe, scalable, and integrated test and evaluation of low-to-no emissions AAM technologies in the pursuit of cleaner and faster transportation and services.

Mayor, Sharon Gibson, welcomed the development.

“Further investment in aerospace is an exciting development for our region. It represents a major step toward creating new opportunities which means more local jobs,” she said.

“It’s exciting that Latrobe is set to play a role in the nation’s aviation future, which will be good news for improving emergency services, industry and public transport.”

Founder and Chief Remote Pilot of Yarra Drones, Ravi Murty, echoed the Mayor’s sentiment.

“We are honoured to partner with Latrobe City Council to deliver this nationally significant AAM Command Centre. The facility will provide a controlled, regulatory-aligned environment where national and international companies can develop, test, and trial uncrewed aircraft systems safely and efficiently,” he said.

“Our focus is to deliver a scalable, future-ready platform that supports testing, evaluation, certification, and the commercialisation of Uncrewed Aviation Systems and Advanced Air Mobility operations.

“By enabling research and development, and system trials in Latrobe City, the Command Centre positions the region as a hub for innovation, capability building, and advanced aviation development, and we are privileged to be part of this initiative.”

Australia’s emerging drone sector is expected to deliver a $14.5 billion economic boost and create more than 5,500 jobs annually. Positioning Latrobe to attract a significant share of this national opportunity, Council has established the Latrobe Aerospace Technology Precinct (the Precinct), a national Centre of Excellence and Australia’s first fully integrated site for advanced air mobility research, development, testing, and evaluation.

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