← Back to Administrative base of the Special Operations Command
Drone Rules for Administrative base of the Special Operations Command
Goiânia, State of Goiás (go)
• Brazil
Av. Salvador - Jardim Guanabara, Goiânia - GO, 74675-710, Brazil
Lat: -16.6138 • Lng: -49.2266
Rules Edit History: Administrative base of the Special Operations Command
Showing changes between revisions.
Mapped shape change
Old outline is gray. New outline is blue.
May 26, 2026 3:13 PM
Approved
• box and info
Moderation feedback
NeedsHumanReview
Confidence: 0.00
The proposed no-fly zone edit needs further review to confirm its accuracy and the appropriateness of the outlined area.
Changed fields
Mapped shape change
Click to load this change into the shared map viewer here.
| Field | Before | After |
|---|---|---|
| Rule category | Ground | Air |
| Flight status | Unknown | NoFly |
| Summary | — | Critical No-Fly Zone covering the Special Operations Command Administrative Base (BAdmCOpEsp). All unauthorized drone flights are strictly prohibited within this airspace to eliminate severe security risks involving military counter-terrorism units, strategic army defense assets, and tactical helicopter maneuvers. |
| Mapped shapes | — | 149e825e-4c95-4f22-a57a-139d11d8311d |
Before
After
The Special Operations Command Administrative Base (BAdmCOpEsp), located on Avenida Salvador in the Jardim Guanabara neighborhood of Goiânia, Goiás, is the highly secure headquarters for the Brazilian Army's elite Special Operations Command (Copesp). This critical military installation houses specialized units, including the 1st Special Forces Battalion, the 1st Commando Action Battalion, and the 1st Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Defense Battalion. The facility frequently conducts highly classified tactical training, domestic security operations, and rotary-wing (helicopter) tactical deployments.
The airspace surrounding this base is subject to stringent security protocols due to the strategic nature of the personnel and assets stationed within. Drones operating over or near this facility present not only a physical collision hazard to low-flying tactical military helicopters but also a severe national security and surveillance violation. Uncoordinated drone operations within the base perimeter, its tactical training sectors, or its strictly regulated defensive airspace corridors are completely illegal and aggressively penalized under federal and military law (Brazilian Penal Code, Art. 261).
Sources
Regulatory & Military Authorities: Department of Airspace Control (DECEA), ANAC, and the Brazilian Army (Exército Brasileiro).
Primary Framework: ICA 100-40 (DECEA regulations on UAS) and Article 261 of the Brazilian Penal Code.
Flight Planning Portal: Operational protection zones, military restricted areas (Airspace Restriction Grids), and specific military authorizations are managed strictly via SARPAS NG and Aisweb.
Show inline change markers
+ The Special Operations Command Administrative Base (BAdmCOpEsp), located on Avenida Salvador in the Jardim Guanabara neighborhood of Goiânia, Goiás, is the highly secure headquarters for the Brazilian Army's elite Special Operations Command (Copesp). This critical military installation houses specialized units, including the 1st Special Forces Battalion, the 1st Commando Action Battalion, and the 1st Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Defense Battalion. The facility frequently conducts highly classified tactical training, domestic security operations, and rotary-wing (helicopter) tactical deployments. + + The airspace surrounding this base is subject to stringent security protocols due to the strategic nature of the personnel and assets stationed within. Drones operating over or near this facility present not only a physical collision hazard to low-flying tactical military helicopters but also a severe national security and surveillance violation. Uncoordinated drone operations within the base perimeter, its tactical training sectors, or its strictly regulated defensive airspace corridors are completely illegal and aggressively penalized under federal and military law (Brazilian Penal Code, Art. 261). + + Sources + + Regulatory & Military Authorities: Department of Airspace Control (DECEA), ANAC, and the Brazilian Army (Exército Brasileiro). + + Primary Framework: ICA 100-40 (DECEA regulations on UAS) and Article 261 of the Brazilian Penal Code. + + Flight Planning Portal: Operational protection zones, military restricted areas (Airspace Restriction Grids), and specific military authorizations are managed strictly via SARPAS NG and Aisweb.