The Civil Aviation Authority have confirmed sightings of ‘unusual and unidentified’ objects in our skies are rising year on year
More “alien” objects are being spotted near UK airports as experts fear they are “getting braver”.
Official Government figures show incidents of “unidentified objects” in the atmosphere are growing year on year. A Freedom of Information request carried out by the Daily Star Sunday found numbers of reports of “unusual” sightings in our skies are soaring.
Statistics from the UK Civil Aviation Authority show that in January 2010 there was only one incident. But that figure jumped to 14 in 2017 and then up again to 20 reports throughout 2023. In 2024 there were 24 recorded incidents and last year there were a total of 19, but that number is expected to rise.
Alien experts have warned it shows aliens are “getting braver”.
The CAA said these are all “Airprox or other aviation safety incident reports” that involve objects described as unidentified, unknown, uncorrelated or unusual.
The formal documents detail situations where aircraft safety was, or potentially could have been, compromised.
But alien hunters do not believe it is all that unusual.
Paranormal expert Robert Pulme said: “It really is not that unusual when you consider what the world has been in the past few years.
“We have been in a mess. Covid hit, the world is still in a mess and now there is talks of WW3 in the coming times.
“It is all really unsettled, so if another form of life is looking to communicate with us, either to work with us or against us, there is no better time to make an impact and get a hold of the planet than when things are unsteady.
“Lots of things point to 2026 being the year we could see the public arrival of aliens on planet Earth. We believe they have been here a long time before now, but on the quiet.
“But this year things will come to a head and many in my field believe we will soon hear publicly and everyone will have to sit up and take notice.”
#Aliens #invade #Earth #sightings #soar #experts #warn #year



