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Pizza by drone – unmanned air delivery set to take off

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A NEW Zealand pizza chain aims to become the world’s first company to offer a commercial drone delivery service, a milestone in the once-unthinkabl­e quest to save time and money with an air-borne supply chain dispensing with people.

Some of the world’s biggest companies including Amazon.com Inc and Google, or Alphabet Inc as it is known, have plans to make deliveries by drone and aviation authoritie­s in the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand have been relaxing rules to allow air deliveries.

Last month, US convenienc­e store chain 7-Eleven Inc conducted the first single commercial drone delivery – coffee, donuts and a chicken sandwich – as part of a trial.

Domino’s Pizza Enterprise­s Ltd conducted a demonstrat­ion pizza delivery by drone in the New Zealand city of Auckland yesterday, and afterwards said it aimed to be the first company to launch a regular drone service, late this year.

“We’ve always said that it doesn’t make sense to have a twoton machine delivering a two-kilogramme order,” Domino’s Chief Executive Officer Don Meij said in a statement.

With clear skies and small population of 4.4 million, New Zealand last year became one of the world’s first countries to clear commercial drone deliveries.

“Our enabling laws and regulation means we have the ideal environmen­t,” New Zealand Transport Minister Simon Bridges said after the Domino’s test flight.

But Philip Solaris, director of another drone company, X-craft Enterprise­s, said that while New Zealand has accommodat­ing regulation­s on drones, Domino’s would be held back by a rule requiring drones to be kept in sight at all times.

“I can’t truly see how commercial­ly viable that idea is because you would have to literally have somebody walking along to keep it in the line of sight, watching it at all times,” Solaris said.

Domino’s service would still need to overcome “random hazards (like) power lines, moving vehicles, children in the backyard playing,” he said.

The Domino’s and 7-Eleven deliveries both used drones provided by US-headquarte­d Australian drone company Flirtey.

Domino’s said it is also looking at opportunit­ies for drone delivery trials in Australia, Belgium, France, the Netherland­s, Japan and Germany.

In Australia, drone deliveries will be legal next month, provided the drones stay at least 30 metres from houses. – Reuters

 ??  ?? TEST: A delivery drone performs a test flight with a Domino’s pizza box.
TEST: A delivery drone performs a test flight with a Domino’s pizza box.

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