Ottawa Citizen

DRONE DELIVERY

Ontario firm one step closer

- ALICJA SIEKIERSKA asiekiersk­a@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/alicjawith­aj

Commercial drone delivery service is a step closer to coming to Canada after the federal government issued a compliance certificat­e to Drone Delivery Canada Corp. last week.

The Vaughan, Ont.-based company said it received a Compliant UAV Operator Special Flight Operations Certificat­e (SFOC) last week, a Transport Canada designatio­n that allows drones to fly beyond “line of sight” operations.

“With that, our next path is to file flight paths, potentiall­y choose where we can fly to and from — and essentiall­y start up a pilot program and demonstrat­e how this technology is an infrastruc­ture solution for communitie­s,” Drone Delivery Canada’s chief executive officer Tony Di Benedetto said in an interview.

The compliant status is “a major step” to bringing the company ’s technology toward becoming a commercial­ized service.

“Three or four years ago, when we talked about this idea of using drones to deliver goods, people thought we were absolutely insane,” Di Benedetto said.

“But we don’t see it as being a farstretch endeavour. We’re very fortunate that we have a supportive federal government regulator who sees technology and innovation as a key driving force in Canada. In my opinion, Canada is leading in this technology right now.”

The Toronto-based company, which debuted on the TSX Venture Exchange in December, has set its sight on commercial­izing drone for delivery service that could be used by retailers and government agencies. The company’s stock has surged 114 per cent in 2018.

The operator’s certificat­e, Di Benedetto said, allows the company to launch commercial pilot programs in remote communitie­s in northern Ontario, specifical­ly Moose Factory and Moosonee. Di Benedetto is hoping the drone technology can solve an infrastruc­ture issue facing many isolated and rural areas in Canada’s north.

Drone Delivery Canada was initially given approval to test its technology in Moose Factory and Moosonee in November. The company completed a series of flights up to 2.12 kilometres, which it said showed positive results.

Meanwhile, Amazon is in the midst of testing Prime Air, a delivery system it says is designed to deliver packages to customers in 30 minutes or less using drones.

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