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Drone Rules for Aeroporto Regional do Vale do Aço
Santana do Paraíso, Minas Gerais (mg)
• Brazil
Rodovia BR-458, Km 43, s/n Distrito Industrial, Santana do Paraíso - MG, 35167-000, Brazil
Lat: -19.4744 • Lng: -42.4877
Rules Edit History: Aeroporto Regional do Vale do Aço
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May 26, 2026 4:59 PM
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| Field | Before | After |
|---|---|---|
| Rule category | Ground | Air |
| Flight status | Unknown | NoFly |
| Summary | — | Critical No-Fly Zone covering Vale do Aço Regional Airport (SBIP). All unauthorized drone flights are strictly prohibited within this airspace to eliminate severe collision risks with scheduled regional commercial jetliners, corporate executive turboprops, and critical aeromedical evacuation flights. |
| Mapped shapes | — | ecdf3be0-adec-451e-a02c-3b7a4da54e5b |
Before
After
Vale do Aço Regional Airport (SBIP), also known as Ipatinga Airport and located in the municipality of Santana do Paraíso, Minas Gerais, serves as the vital aviation hub for the heavily industrialized Vale do Aço metropolitan area (including Ipatinga, Timóteo, and Coronel Fabriciano). The airport handles frequent commercial passenger flights connecting the region to major national hubs like Belo Horizonte, alongside an intense volume of private corporate jets servicing local steel manufacturing giants, and time-critical medical evacuation missions.
Because the airport is situated in a unique valley topography flanked by hills and industrial infrastructure, arriving and departing aircraft execute low-altitude instrument (IFR) and visual (VFR) approaches directly over the surrounding urban-rural transition zones. Any uncoordinated drone activity within these strict approach paths or near the runway environment poses an immediate, catastrophic threat to human life and commercial aviation safety. Spontaneous or recreational drone flights within the airfield perimeter, its obstacle limitation surfaces, or its active traffic patterns are completely banned under federal law (Brazilian Penal Code, Art. 261).
Sources
Regulatory & Administrative Authorities: Department of Airspace Control (DECEA), National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC), and the airport's management concessionaire.
Primary Framework: ICA 100-40 (DECEA regulations on Unmanned Aircraft Systems) and Article 261 of the Brazilian Penal Code.
Flight Planning Portal: Operational safety grids, airport restriction parameters, and formal airspace clearance protocols are managed via SARPAS NG and Aisweb.
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+ Vale do Aço Regional Airport (SBIP), also known as Ipatinga Airport and located in the municipality of Santana do Paraíso, Minas Gerais, serves as the vital aviation hub for the heavily industrialized Vale do Aço metropolitan area (including Ipatinga, Timóteo, and Coronel Fabriciano). The airport handles frequent commercial passenger flights connecting the region to major national hubs like Belo Horizonte, alongside an intense volume of private corporate jets servicing local steel manufacturing giants, and time-critical medical evacuation missions. + + Because the airport is situated in a unique valley topography flanked by hills and industrial infrastructure, arriving and departing aircraft execute low-altitude instrument (IFR) and visual (VFR) approaches directly over the surrounding urban-rural transition zones. Any uncoordinated drone activity within these strict approach paths or near the runway environment poses an immediate, catastrophic threat to human life and commercial aviation safety. Spontaneous or recreational drone flights within the airfield perimeter, its obstacle limitation surfaces, or its active traffic patterns are completely banned under federal law (Brazilian Penal Code, Art. 261). + + Sources + + Regulatory & Administrative Authorities: Department of Airspace Control (DECEA), National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC), and the airport's management concessionaire. + + Primary Framework: ICA 100-40 (DECEA regulations on Unmanned Aircraft Systems) and Article 261 of the Brazilian Penal Code. + + Flight Planning Portal: Operational safety grids, airport restriction parameters, and formal airspace clearance protocols are managed via SARPAS NG and Aisweb.