The First Urban Drone Delivery Just Happened In Nevada
"We are rapidly approaching a time where drone delivery is a reality"
The drone was flown by drone delivery company Flirtey,
which got it's start in 2013 in Australia, delivering textbooks to
universities, before it moved to Nevada. Its six-engine multicopter
flew along a predetermined path. When it reached the target house, it
lowered a package containing bottled water, emergency food, and a first
aid kit. The house was uninhabited, as the flight was a demonstration of
what a rescue drone might be able to carry to people in need. Flirtey
already conducted a rural delivery test, so it makes sense that urban
was next, even if that “urban” is defined as a fairly small town.
According to Flirtey CEO Matthew Sweeney, 86% of packages are 5.5 pounds
or less, and that the drone is designed to carry payloads that size up
to 10 miles away.
Hawthorne, Nevada isn’t known for
much. The town of roughly 3,000 sits on the western edge of the state,
near an Army ammunition depot, and not much else. Announced today,
Hawthorne is now the site of what might be a historic precedent: the
first urban delivery in the United States by a fully autonomous drone.

“Hawthorne is a town with ideal
characteristics for us, because you’ve got residential housing lots that
have trees, power lines, that are perfect for research and testing
precision delivery,” Sweeney told Popular Science, “the kinds
of things you have in a regular suburban environment.” After Hawthorne,
Sweeney said, the next step is to "do it over an urban populated area,
the kind of environment that people live in on a daily basis."
“When I came to the U.S. about two years [ago], there had
only been one 333 exemption for drone use, and that was for drone
operations in the arctic. In the past two years, we’ve seen the FAA
grant the commercial operates the ability to fly and operate at an
exponential rate. I think that people looking at this industry are
seeing it move faster than many observers anticipated. Currently before
Congress we’ve got the FAA reauthorization bill, which is envisioned to
specifically include an authorization for drone delivery. I think the
regulations are moving at a faster pace than many people are realizing.
We are rapidly approaching a time where drone delivery is a reality, not
just in the United States but around the world."
To make the test possible, Flirtey
collaborated with the University of Nevada, NASA, Virginia Tech, and the
Nevada Institute for Autonomous Systems (NIAS), the FAA-designated
Nevada UAS Test Site. In mid-April, people can watch the delivery in Foreign Correspondent, a half-hour documentary that will air on ABC. And the delivery puts Hawthorne on the map, in a way that the Mineral County Museum’s “collection of hand-made knives taken from prisoners at the state prison” hasn’t yet.
No comments:
Post a Comment