The service, paid for by the Rwandan government,
will serve as a testing ground for drone delivery.
Drones manufactured by Zipline |
This drone is cute. Two red wings sprout from its
short, lightweight body. It's little and sort of tubby, seeming to exclaim,
"I'm an airplane too!"
But its mission will be vital. The drones, manufactured
by Zipline, will deliver blood and, later, rabies vaccines to remote Rwandan
health clinics. A small paperboard box filled with the life-saving medical
supplies fits into the belly of the drone, along with a parachute. Flying long
distances over frequently washed-out roads, the drones will get help to those
in need faster than the current delivery methods of motorcycles and trucks.
Zipline, based south of San Francisco, will have
muscle behind its diminutive drones. It has partnered with the UPS Foundation,
which is the shipping giant's charitable wing, and the Gavi Vaccine Alliance,
which helps distribute vaccines in Rwanda and elsewhere.
A small paperboard box filled with the life-saving medical supplies fits into the belly of the drone |
The Rwandan government will pay for each delivery
Zipline makes. The arrangement is a unique way to test drone shipping, a
much-hyped service that no company in the US has yet been able to deliver on.
Amazon,
Walmart
and Google
have been developing their ability to deliver by drone, but the Federal
Aviation Administration currently restricts drone operation tightly. It's still
sorting out what to do about the nascent technology buzzing through America's
busy airspace. The situation is different in Rwanda.
The country's aviation regulator has cleared
Zipline for takeoff. That's possible partly because Rwandan airspace is
simpler, said Keller Rinaudo, CEO and founder of Zipline. There are fewer hobby
pilots, parachutists and commercial flights for drones to dodge. There's also less
bureaucracy.
Launcher would fire the drone into the air for flight |
"In reality, they are able to move a little
faster," Rinaudo said Thursday at a press event at Zipline's headquarters.
Seated on a stage with UPS Foundation President Eduardo Martinez, Rinaudo
explained that the FAA faces a conundrum.
"The main thing the FAA wants is data,"
Rinaudo said, but it can't get data without letting people operate drones.
So off to Rwanda go the Zipline drones. Starting
in July, health workers can order blood from Zipline's hub with a text message
-- something the company's employees frequently compare to ordering a pizza. It
even takes just 30 minutes for blood to arrive. The delivery of rabies vaccine
will start sometime in the future, Rinaudo said.
The Zipline drone has two fixed wings, looking
more like a model airplane than the insect-like quadcopter drone. On Thursday,
its launch in front of the gathered reporters is a dramatic event. Placed in a
cradle at the bottom of a metal beam angled up toward the horizon, the drone
takes off with a hiss and a bang. It shoots up the metal beam and into the sky,
circling the airspace above.
The box falls quickly despite its fluttering plastic parachute but inside, the plastic packet containing (fake) blood and a bottle of medicine are intact. |
Soon it's making laps a few hundred yards away,
measuring the wind before making its drop. After charting a course, the drone
swoops in and ejects the box, which falls quickly despite its fluttering
plastic parachute. It thuds to the ground. But inside, the plastic packet
containing (fake) blood and a bottle of medicine are intact.
Then the drone heads back. It lands, but Zipline
protects its landing mechanism as a trade secret and asked reporters, as a
condition of attending the event, not to describe it.
From the moment the plane takes off, everything
is automated. The plane is full of sensors that send flight information back to
the ground to be logged and interpreted by Zipline engineers. That data will be
invaluable to the company as it works to build its credibility as a drone
delivery company.
With UPS involved, it's easy to imagine what the
shipping giant has in mind for the future. Asked what UPS believes it will get
from its involvement, Martinez said the company's foundation always gains
valuable information when it works on humanitarian and disaster relief
projects.
"We obviously learn about this process," he said of the drone delivery program, "but this is a strictly humanitarian mission and we're excited to be a part of it."
Drop Blood Not Bombs:
Drones To Deliver Emergency Medicine To Rwanda
© Stephen Lam / Reuters |
Drones are frequently associated with less than
altruistic causes – such as remote attacks. However, UPS is teaming up with
drone company Zipline and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, to deliver blood for
transfusions in Rwanda.
Beginning in June, doctors and healthcare
providers in rural Rwanda will be able to order supplies with just a text
message. Within 30 minutes, they will receive a delivery of blood or other
medical necessities via a Zipline drone. Each package will be dropped with a
tiny parachute attached.
In a country like Rwanda, the ability to quickly
airdrop supplies could be a game changer. For example, heavy floods have caused
landslides in North Rwanda, blocking off roads, Al-Jazeera reported Monday.
Therefore, a startup like Zipline could make a huge difference in remote places.
“UPS is always exploring innovative ways to
enhance humanitarian logistics to help save lives, and we’re proud to partner
with Gavi and Zipline as we explore ways to extend the Rwandan government’s
innovations at a global scale,” Eduardo Martinez, president of the UPS
Foundation and chief diversity and inclusion officer at the United Parcel
Service said in a press
release.
Zipline and the Rwandan government will begin
making as many as 150 blood deliveries a day with their eventual goal being to
be within a 30-minute delivery radius of 11 million Rwandan citizens by the end
of 2016, MarketWatch reported.
“With the expertise and vision of UPS, Gavi and
Zipline, instant drone delivery will allow us to save thousands of lives in a
way that was never before possible,” Zipline CEO Keller Rinaudo said in the UPS
Foundation press release.
The way that the drone works is not unlike
ordering food online, and the process will begin when a doctor or nurse sends a
request for blood via text, CNET reported.
When it is received, a staff member at the West Rwanda Zipline hub loads up a
box with the necessary supplies and launches the drone. The drone flies to its
destination based on a predetermined flight plan. Then it sends a text message
to the doctor several minutes before it approaches its destination. When it
does, it releases the package and then returns to its base.
Zipline hopes to expand
into delivering the rabies vaccine as well, according to Rinaudo.
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