Counter-UAS for Canada is coming.
Canadian-owned drone detection, airspace security, and Bill C-15 authorization guidance. Launching soon.
CounterUAS.ca is a Canadian-owned counter-drone company. We provide drone detection systems, airspace threat assessments, C-UAS operator training, and guidance on Transport Canada's new drone interdiction authorization framework created by Bill C-15.
What changed in March 2026
On March 26, 2026, Bill C-15 received royal assent and became law. It updates the Aeronautics Act to more clearly prohibit unlawful interference with drone operations and enables Transport Canada to issue authorizations to certain entities to interdict drones that present security risks.
Bill C-15 creates a two-tier market: drone detection is available to any organization today, while drone mitigation is limited to entities authorized by Transport Canada under the new framework.
The regulations and guidance implementing Bill C-15's authorization framework are still being developed by Transport Canada. Organizations planning a mitigation capability should monitor Transport Canada guidance and obtain legal advice before procurement.
What we'll offer
Drone detection integration
RF detection, radar, EO/IR cameras, and Remote ID fused into a single airspace picture with evidence-grade incident records.
Site threat assessments
On-site airspace threat and vulnerability review, with a written report, sensor placement plan, and CONOPS recommendations.
C-UAS operator training
Practitioner training for security teams operating detection systems, delivered by Transport Canada–certified RPAS instructors.
Bill C-15 authorization consulting
Policy, SOP, and application support for organizations pursuing Transport Canada interdiction authorization under the new framework.
Built for Canadian security operators
- Corrections and detentionFacilities managing contraband delivery and airspace incursion risk.
- Police and public safetyAgencies preparing for authorization under the new framework.
- Critical infrastructureUtilities, energy, ports, and rail protecting operational sites.
- Events and venuesStadiums, festivals, and major events with temporary airspace concerns.
- Defence and governmentFederal and provincial organizations building airspace capability.
Common questions
Join the launch list, or reach us now
If you have an active drone concern at your site, tell us and a real person will reply within one business day.