Global Times

New drone delivery era coming

Chinese firms seen outstrippi­ng overseas rivals

- Xu Yong, Delivery industry analyst

“JD drones started flying last year, yet those of Amazon are still being researched and tested.”

JD’s drone research and developmen­t center is based, the company also announced plans to develop a new VT1 drone that can carry packages weighing as much as 200 kilograms, meaning that it can load large home appliances such as TVs, fridges and washing machines, news website yicai. com reported on Thursday.

The new drone has a hybrid gaselectri­c engine, is 3.4 meters long and can fly 150 kilometers with only 2 liters of fuel, said the report, citing JD’s vice president Xiao Jun.

JD also has several smaller types of delivery drones that are being tested and operated in four provinces across China, according to media reports, including V2 and Y3 drones that can deliver parcels weighing from 5 to 30 kilograms.

The company also announced in May that it has begun testing a new “heavy- lift” drone capable of carrying a ton of cargo to Chinese customers in rural areas.

Trial deliveries using drones started in Xi’an and Suqian, East China’s Jiangsu Province in June.

From June to July 31, delivery drones were used more than 800 times and traveled 4,000 kilometers in Xi’an, the Xinhua News Agency reported on Thursday.

Similar to JD, e- commerce giant Alibaba Group and courier firm SF Express are also launching massive drone delivery trials. The latter received the country’s first drone airspace license in June.

“Like JD, domestic firms are aiming to expand drone deliveries in rural areas where infrastruc­ture is poor and delivery costs are high… so it’s cost- effective to send drones into the countrysid­e,” Jiang Hongchang, an independen­t industry analyst based in Shenzhen, South China’s Guangdong Province, told the Global Times on Thursday.

Using drones could help the company cut costs by more than 70 percent, Liu Qiangdong, JD’s founder, said in an interview in June.

However, “it may take some years for commercial use [ of drones] to be- come widespread in the domestic market,” Jiang said, given difficulti­es such as the duration of battery power, the stability of flights and loading limits, as well as regulatory obstacles.

Taking the lead

Chinese companies are not the only players looking to conquer aerial deliveries.

US- based Amazon was actually the first company to propose delivering packages with drones in 2013, Xu Yong, a delivery industry analyst, told the Global Times on Thursday.

“In fact, the future prospects for applicatio­n of drone deliveries are more economic and feasible in the US compared with China, because the labor costs there are higher and the country is more sparsely populated,” Xu explained.

However, “JD drones started flying last year, yet those of Amazon are still being researched and tested,” Xu said, adding that JD is actually way ahead of Amazon in the drone delivery realm.

Besides, China is home to a complete industry chain for producing drones, and domestic firms have already taken a lead over their foreign rivals in terms of technologi­es related to drones, experts said.

For example, the Amazon Prime Air, the latest type of drone unveiled by Amazon in 2016, is only able to carry packages of up to 2.5 kilograms, far below the loading capacity of the JD drones.

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 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A JD drone undergoes a trial delivery run in Xi’an, capital of Northwest China’s Shaanxi Province in June.
Photo: VCG A JD drone undergoes a trial delivery run in Xi’an, capital of Northwest China’s Shaanxi Province in June.

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