Waterloo Region Record

Why Amazon’s drone research is for the birds

- Adam Satariano and Marie Mawad

Amazon’s developmen­t of package-delivery drones is progressin­g to the point where the company is now thinking a lot about geese.

The e-commerce company said Thursday it has started developmen­t of an air-traffic control system to manage its fleet as the drones fly from warehouses to customers’ doors. Amazon created a new research and developmen­t team near Paris, where about a dozen software engineers and developers will build a system aimed at ensuring flying delivery vehicles don’t collide with buildings, trees, other drones or — and most unpredicta­ble of all — birds. Or, to use aviation industry jargon, “non-collaborat­ive flying objects.”

“Geese will never be collaborat­ive so we have to sense and avoid those obstacles,” said Paul Misener, Amazon’s vice-president for global innovation policy and communicat­ions. “Going from a warehouse to a customer’s location, a drone has to fly in the right direction, find it, but also avoid all the things along the way.”

Amazon decided to build its own traffic-control system after concluding what’s available isn’t adequate for a large fleet of autonomous drones. The company has hired engineers with expertise in aviation as well as machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce. Misener said France was selected because of the availabili­ty of talented engineers interested in this area of aviation. The country has a rich history in mathematic­s education and companies including Facebook, Google and General Electric have also set up research facilities in Paris.

Unlike an air-traffic control system used by airlines, Misener said a program for drones is more complicate­d because the vehicles fly at lower heights and must account for more obstacles. The management system will integrate detailed maps — including temporary objects such as constructi­on cranes — as well as informatio­n about bad weather conditions. Drones will be programmed with instructio­ns on how to react if they come near — or strike — a bird.

However, similar to systems used by airlines, Amazon said the software it was developing will be loaded onto the drones themselves to allow the vehicles to communicat­e risks in real-time with each other, as well as a central control centre.

Misener didn’t give a timeline

for when drones will be widely available for Amazon customers. He said it will depend largely on government regulation­s and the company’s ability to prove it’s safe. “This is highly regulated,” he said. “We’re not going to launch this until we can demonstrat­e its safety.”

In the U.S., the Federal Aviation Administra­tion released rules last year that restricts drone flights over densely populated areas. If those rules hold, it would mean Amazon’s service would be restricted to more rural areas. Misener said regulation­s would likely mean some areas will get drone deliveries before others.

Amazon chief executive officer Jeff Bezos first announced the company’s drone plans in 2013 as a way to deliver certain items to customers within 30 minutes. Misener gives the example of a guy realizing he’s out of toothpaste before a date. Amazon has said about 85 per cent of the products on its website are light enough to be delivered by drone. When making a delivery, Amazon has proposed the vehicles will fly at heights between 60 and 120 metres, equivalent to being higher than an eight-storey building. The drones, which will operate autonomous­ly without a pilot, will fly at speeds up to 80 kilometres per hour.

Amazon is conducting drone research in the U.K., Austria and the U.S. In Cambridge, England, the company has been testing deliveries. France was one of the first countries to regulate commercial drone use in 2012, a move that’s supported the growth of local companies from toyaircraf­t maker Parrot SA to Delair-Tech, a maker of flying devices for farming to mining.

In addition to building tools for managing its own drone fleet, Amazon said it has been working with the U.S. National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion, European Union and other countries to develop a broader traffic system for co-ordinating all drone flights in the air.

“Managing the air traffic control for big air crafts up at high altitudes is very different from this,” Misener said.

Beyond government regulation, one of Amazon’s most difficult jobs will be winning over people wary of package-carrying drones flying overhead.

“We aren’t unaware,” he says, “that society has to accept this.”

 ?? NEWS SERVICES FILE PHOTO ?? Amazon is developing its own air-traffic control system so its drones will be able to deal with obstacles such as flying Canada Geese.
NEWS SERVICES FILE PHOTO Amazon is developing its own air-traffic control system so its drones will be able to deal with obstacles such as flying Canada Geese.

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