Aerial application of plant protection products (pesticides, fungicides, herbicides) by drone is not currently permitted in Ireland. Two separate regulatory barriers exist:
- No national derogation from the aerial spraying prohibition under the transposed EU Sustainable Use Directive (2009/128/EC)
- No plant protection products are licensed for aerial application in Ireland — without a licensed product, operations cannot commence regardless of other authorisations
Drone operations for monitoring, mapping, and scouting are entirely legal. Only the spraying component is prohibited.
Why Is Drone Spraying Banned? The Historical Accident
To understand the current situation, you have to understand why aerial spraying was banned in the first place — and why drone spraying got swept up in that ban despite being a completely different thing.
The EU's Sustainable Use Directive (2009/128/EC) introduced a general prohibition on aerial application of plant protection products across all Member States. This was a response to decades of misuse of fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters for crop spraying — operations that caused significant spray drift onto neighbouring land, water courses, hedgerows, and adjacent crops. The technology was crude, the accuracy was poor, and the environmental damage was real.
Ireland transposed this directive into national law, and the prohibition has been in place since. Derogations are possible in "justified cases" — but Ireland has never granted one. There is currently no derogation, and no plant protection products licensed for aerial use in the country.
Here is the problem: when drone spraying emerged as a technology in the 2010s, regulators across the EU initially classified it as "aerial spraying" and applied the same prohibition. Bureaucratically, a drone applying pesticide was treated identically to a helicopter doing the same — despite the fact that the two operations have almost nothing in common in terms of precision, drift risk, or environmental impact.
Why Drone Spraying is Fundamentally Different
This conflation of drone spraying with traditional aerial spraying is the core regulatory injustice that the current reform is correcting. The differences are not minor — they are categorical:
| Factor | Traditional Aerial (Aircraft/Helicopter) | Agri-Drone Spraying |
|---|---|---|
| Operating height | 30–100m above crop | 1.5–3m above crop — same as a tractor |
| Spray drift risk | Very high — large droplets carried long distances | Minimal — rotor downwash actively drives spray into canopy |
| Application precision | Field-level only, no variable rate | Sub-metre precision, variable rate by zone |
| Chemical volume used | Standard rates — same as ground sprayer | 30–70% reduction due to precision targeting |
| Soil compaction | None (airborne) | None (airborne) — advantage over tractor |
| Operation in wet conditions | Possible but increased drift risk | Can operate when tractors cannot enter wet fields |
| Data logging | Minimal | Full GPS-logged record of exactly what was sprayed where and when |
The EU's own proposed regulatory text now acknowledges this directly. The new Sustainable Use Regulation specifically notes that drone spraying "is likely to help reduce the use of plant protection products due to targeted application and consequently help reduce the risks to human health and the environment compared to use of land-based application equipment."
Read that again: the EU is saying agri-drones are safer than tractors for pesticide application. That is a fundamental shift from treating drones as aerial spraying equipment to recognising them as precision agricultural tools.
The EU Reform That Changes Everything
On 22 June 2022, the European Commission issued its Proposal for a Regulation on the Sustainable Use of Plant Protection Products — intended to replace the old 2009 Directive with a binding Regulation. This is the most significant shift in EU pesticide law in a generation, and it contains explicit provisions for agri-drone exemptions for the first time.
The 50% Pesticide Reduction Target
The EU's Farm to Fork strategy set a binding target: a 50% reduction in the overall use of chemical plant protection products and the more hazardous ones by 2030. This is an extraordinarily ambitious target. Traditional farming methods cannot achieve it without catastrophic yield losses. Precision farming technology — and particularly drone-based precision application — is one of the primary tools that can make this possible without destroying farm profitability.
This is the political engine behind the regulatory change. The EU cannot hit its own pesticide targets without enabling the technology that makes precision application possible. The regulation is following the ambition.
Article 21: The Drone Exemption Framework
The proposed regulation creates an explicit framework — Article 21 — under which Member States can grant exemptions from the aerial spraying prohibition for drones that meet defined criteria. The criteria include:
- Technical specifications of the drone (spray drift characteristics, rotor configuration, payload, operating height and speed)
- Weather conditions including wind speed at time of operation
- Area to be sprayed, including topography
- Evidence that drone application carries lower risks than alternative equipment
This is not a vague aspiration — it is a legislative mechanism specifically designed to allow countries like Ireland to enable drone spraying once they satisfy themselves that the conditions are met. The evidence base from Asia and European vineyards already exists to satisfy those conditions. The question is whether Ireland will act.
Germany: The Blueprint for What Ireland Should Do
Ireland doesn't need to invent the wheel. Germany has already done exactly what Ireland needs to do, and it's working.
In November 2022, the German Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport published a National Standard Scenario (Nationales Standardszenario) approving agricultural drones under 50kg for spraying operations. This isn't a temporary pilot — it's a permanent national framework.
Under the German model:
- Agricultural drones under 50kg (previously classified as Specific Category) are now treated more like Open Category for the application process
- Operators submit a simple application form with name, contact details, and planned operation timeframe
- Written confirmation is received and operations can commence
- The framework covers both liquid spraying and biological control agents (e.g., releasing Trichogramma wasps to control European corn borer)
The German ministry explicitly noted that "the experience of the authorities in such operations has been positive." This is the evidence base Ireland can draw on — there is no need to start from scratch, and there is no credible regulatory argument for not following Germany's lead.
Ireland's Specific Gap — and Why It Persists
Ireland is behind Germany, France, and several other EU member states on this issue. The reasons are more administrative than substantive:
Gap 1: No Derogation
The Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM) has not yet created a derogation from the aerial application prohibition. This requires a formal regulatory process, but it is entirely achievable within existing EU law — particularly once the new SUR regulation passes.
Gap 2: No Licensed Products
Even if a derogation existed, you would need plant protection products specifically licensed for aerial application in Ireland. No products currently carry this authorisation. DAFM would need to work with product registrants to add aerial application to existing product licences — a process that takes time but is not technically complex.
Gap 3: No Political Pressure
DAFM moves on issues when there is pressure to move. The agri-drone industry in Ireland is nascent, the farming lobby has not prioritised this, and TDs are largely unaware of the issue. This is a solvable problem — but it requires coordinated advocacy. See what you can do →
What the Evidence Shows About Drone Spraying
The most common question is: does it actually work? The answer — based on operational data from China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and European vineyard operations — is unambiguously yes. Here is what the evidence shows:
Beyond volume reduction, drone spraying delivers additional benefits that are particularly relevant to Irish farming conditions:
- Wet field access: Irish weather means tractor-based spraying windows are often lost for days or weeks. A drone can operate when the ground won't support machinery, allowing farmers to hit the correct growth stages for effective treatment.
- Slope and difficult terrain: Areas that tractors can't safely access — steep slopes, wet corners, headlands — can be sprayed precisely by drone.
- Data for compliance: Every drone operation generates a GPS-logged record of exactly what was applied, where, at what rate, and when. Under future EU regulations requiring detailed IPM records, this compliance data has real value.
- Reduced soil compaction: Heavy machinery repeatedly crossing wet Irish soil causes compaction that costs yield for years. Drone application causes zero soil compaction.
Realistic Timeline for Ireland
Article 21 creates the first explicit drone exemption framework in EU law. This is the legal foundation everything else builds on.
Agri-drones under 50kg approved for operations. Simple application process. Proof of concept for what Ireland needs to do.
The new regulation working through the European Parliament. Once passed, Member States have a defined period to transpose and implement — including creating drone spraying exemption frameworks.
DAFM needs to: (1) create a national derogation framework, (2) work with product registrants to license products for aerial application. Both are achievable — neither is automatic.
If Ireland acts when the new regulation passes, commercial agri-drone spraying could begin within 12–18 months of that point. Operators ready now will capture this market.
How to Prepare Right Now
The window between now and Irish regulations opening up is not dead time — it is preparation time. Here is how to use it: