Integrated aerial security company Sky Robots is positioning integrated drone systems as a core layer of operational security for mines and other high-value assets.
The company, on April 10, held a presentation and demonstration at its offices in Centurion, Gauteng, to highlight advances in sensors, automation, training and in-house research and development (R&D) to improve aerial surveillance, rapid response and operational continuity.
Sky Robots demonstrated an integrated aerial security system designed to support mines and other high-value operations where security is fundamental to production. The system combines persistent aerial surveillance using vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) fixed-wing aircraft with rapid-response deployment from vehicle-mounted multisensor drones.
The platform includes capabilities such as remote flying, repeater radios for extended coverage, radio over Internet protocol (ROIP) communication, AI-assisted flight safety using log-based analysis and retravel-augmented generation (RAG) feedback and operations management tools for pilot competency and maintenance tracking. These are supported by in-house training and ongoing local R&D.
This model is particularly relevant for mines and other sites where operational continuity is critical. By linking security capability directly to production continuity, asset protection and operational certainty, Sky Robots positions aerial systems as an enabling layer for capital-intensive industries – not as a standalone technology purchase.
The system is built around both VTOL fixed-wing and multi-rotor platforms, each designed for specific operational roles, including persistent aerial coverage and rapid response.
“The drone is the visible edge of the system, but it is not the system itself. The real value lies in the operating architecture behind it. That is what allows these systems to perform reliably in demanding industrial environments,” Sky Robots founder and MD Bertus van Zyl explained.
Sky Robots’ approach is aimed at environments that require more than ad hoc deployment. Its model brings together aircraft, command-and-control configurations, communications infrastructure, operator training, maintenance support and operational oversight into a structured system designed for continuous use.
Sky Robots affirms that security is not separate from production, highlighting that it protects the people, infrastructure, equipment and materials that make production possible. When security fails, the company adds, operations become less reliable, losses rise and investment confidence weakens. In that environment, jobs and long-term economic activity are also placed at risk.
Sky Robots is shifting the focus beyond standalone drone use and, rather than treating drones as individual tools, the company positions them as part of a structured operating model that includes command and control, remote piloting capability, ROIP radio systems, repeater radios, AI-based flight safety, operations management, training, support and continued R&D.
As part of its growth strategy, Sky Robots is preparing to expand internationally through its Certified Partner programme. Under this model, partners gain access to a structured operating system that supports deployment, training, maintenance, support and long-term system development.
“Our international strategy is based on partnership, but with a disciplined operating model. We want Certified Partners to deploy a complete and credible system, not just individual drone products,” Van Zyl said.
The company continues to invest in aircraft design, electronics, software and supply chain resilience as part of its long-term roadmap. This includes ongoing in-house R&D and a Mauritius-based supply chain hub to support international deployment.
Click Here For The Original Source
