Sichuan Low Altitude Economic Industry College has arrived and will launch three major certificate courses, including "Drone Maintenance Technician".

date
04/02/2026
Recently, the Education Department of Sichuan Province issued a notice on the publication of the list of the third batch of provincial modern industry colleges. The "Sichuan Low-Altitude Economic Industry College" jointly declared by Chengdu Aeronautic Vocational and Technical College and several aviation technology companies and associations was successfully approved for establishment. The Sichuan Low-Altitude Economic Industry College is jointly built by leading enterprises in the low-altitude economic field in the region, with deep integration and sharing between the school and the enterprises. It will focus on core technologies such as unmanned, intelligent, networked, and digitized, cultivating high-tech and high-skilled talents urgently needed in the low-altitude economic industry chain. In the future, the college will focus on addressing the shortage of high-skilled talents in the industrial chain in areas such as drones, air traffic management systems, supply chain finance, and other areas; as well as filling in the professional gaps in fields such as drone maintenance, airborne AI algorithms, airspace management, and operational support, and breaking down real enterprise projects into teaching cases to achieve a three-level response to curriculum gaps with a focus on "courses -tasks -projects", and building a collaborative ecosystem from the "classroom" to the "sky". Next, the college will launch three major certificate courses: "Drone Maintenance Technician", "Air Traffic Control Operations Specialist", and "Supply Chain Digital Analyst". It is estimated that the annual training scale will exceed 1,000 people within three years, directly serving the low-altitude pilot demonstration area in the Chengdu-Chongqing Economic Circle of Sichuan and the Chengdu-Chongqing region, continuously supplying a stream of high-skilled workforce for the national strategy of "low-altitude openness."