Amazon plans to deliver using drones
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Amazon Prime Air would use unmanned flying vehicles for delivering packages
- CEO Jeff Bezos says drone deliveries are at least a few years away
- Drone expert thinks approval will be easier outside the United States
- Weather, safety and battery life all will have to be addressed
What's not fascinating
about a near future in which fleets of whirring sky robots can drop our
every impulse buy on our doorstep faster than we can get Chinese
delivered? (You know, aside from accidental strayings into restricted air space or the rise of the machines.)
But when Bezos took to "60 Minutes" on Sunday to introduce the world to Amazon Prime Air, his idea prompted more questions than it provided answers.
So how close are we, really, to door-to-door drones becoming a reality? And how would they work?
This Amazon video shows a drone picking up a package at a warehouse.
We reached out to Amazon, where official details are still scarce, and chatted with drone expert Missy Cummings,
an associate professor at MIT and one of the Navy's first female
fighter pilots. Here's some of what we've been able to piece together on
a project that Amazon says is, at the very least, a couple of years
away from takeoff.
Could drones really be delivering packages by 2015?
That's what Bezos said is
the best possible scenario. But Cummings, a longtime advocate for the
commercial use of drones, thinks that's optimistic.
The Federal Aviation
Administration needs to sign off on Amazon's flight plans, and Cummings
says the agency hasn't been quick to move on the domestic use of drones.
"I think they (Amazon)
are stepping out in a typically naive way, (but) maybe they have some
secret insight to the FAA that I don't have," she said.
Cummings predicts the
company will get approval to start Prime Air in other countries before
the United States, but she says that having a retail and technology
giant like Amazon pushing for it could speed things up for everyone.
"I don't want anybody to think this is right around the corner," Bezos warned during the "60 Minutes" interview.
How will I know if I'm eligible for a drone visit?
Bezos said the
octocopters will have a 10-mile radius. So, it's likely that folks in
big cities near Amazon distribution sites would be a lot more likely to
qualify than those in more remote areas.
He says they'll initially carry items up to five pounds, which is roughly 86% of all deliveries Amazon makes.
But for even that
10-mile range to work, Amazon better be onto something about battery
life that the rest of us don't know. Cummings said drones the size of
the octocopters have a battery life of about 30 minutes, and the weight
of their cargo could make that even shorter.
What will keep people from shooting them down?
OK, it's perhaps a
little off-topic. But every single conversation we've had about the
Amazon drones has, at some point, ended up focused on the innate human
desire to knock stuff out of the sky, preferably with a loud bang.
Cummings joked about
producing a reality show in which marksmen from different states compete
to see how many octocopter targets they can bag. At least, we're pretty
sure it was a joke.
Perhaps not
surprisingly, Amazon doesn't directly address its drones becoming
high-tech clay pigeons in a statement about safety.
"The FAA is actively
working on rules and an approach for unmanned aerial vehicles that will
prioritize public safety. Safety will be our top priority, and our
vehicles will be built with multiple redundancies and designed to
commercial aviation standards," the statement reads.
But Cummings says it's a real issue.
"It's not just people who hate drones," she said. "It's people who want those packages."
She speculated the
drones will need to fly at an altitude of at least 300 feet for as long
as possible to avoid attracting pot shots from target shooters or
thieves. She also envisions safe "drop spots," at least at first,
instead of delivery to any address within range.
"There are lots of details that need to be worked out, but nothing that is technologically overwhelming," she said.
Will the drones work when the weather is bad?
Amazon's official
statement doesn't address this obvious question. But Cummings says that
to make the drones reliable in most weather conditions, Amazon would
need to improve on currently available technology.
"They can fly in some
precipitation, but certainly not heavy precipitation," she said. "Sleet
or snow ... would obscure some of the sensors. It's hard to make it a
really solid business if the weather holds you back. They're going to
have to work on that."
What could come next?
Amazon isn't the only company at least toying with the idea of using unmanned aerial vehicles for commercial purposes. Domino's posted video of the "DomiCopter" delivering two pizzas in the United Kingdom earlier this year. In June, the Burrito Bomber, the creation of a couple of engineers from Yelp, demoed its ability to fly that tasty treat to your doorstep as well.
And in Australia, Zookal, a textbook company, is already using drones for deliveries.
Cummings hopes that's
all just the beginning. Using drones for beneficial civic or commercial
purposes, instead of military actions, is a growing trend.
"Medical supplies,
wildlife monitoring, cargo, firefighting -- it's a pretty long list of
things that drones can do," she said. "It's reinvigorating a dying
aerospace industry."
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