Khaleej Times

Edible drone to deliver food, drug aid faster in emergencie­s

- Reuters

london — Edible drones filled with food, water or medicine could soon become indispensa­ble in humanitari­an emergencie­s by delivering life-saving supplies to remote areas hit by natural disasters or conflict, their designers said on Monday.

With 50kg of food stocked inside its compartmen­ts, each drone costing £150 ($187) would be able to deliver enough supplies to feed up to 50 people per day, they said.

The frame of the prototype version of the drone — called Pouncer — is made of wood but the designers are planning to use edible materials in the next version.

“Food can be component to build things,” Nigel Gifford, an ex-army catering officer and founder of UKbased Windhorse Aerospace, the company behind the design, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “You fly (the drone) and then eat it,” he said in a phone interview.

With up to 40km reach, the drone can be launched from an aircraft or catapulted from the ground with an accuracy of about 7 metres, giving it an advantage over air drops — often used as a last resort in emergencie­s.

“In combat zones like we have in Aleppo or Mosul nothing will work except what we have,” Gifford said.

“With parachuted air drops the problem is you can’t guarantee where the loads will land.

“In Aleppo we could have put aid straight into some of the streets and we could have done that out of the sight of Daesh.” Parts of the 3 metre by 1.5 metre drone, designed by the team behind Facebook’s solarpower­ed Internet drone Aquila, can be used as fuel or shelter. The Windhorse team includes Bruce Dickinson, entreprene­ur and lead singer of the heavy metal band Iron Maiden and a former Airbus executive, Andrew Morgan. Gifford said several humanitari­an agencies, including medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, Oxfam and the World Health Organisati­on, have already expressed their interest in using the drone. In December Windhorse presented the Pouncer to Britain’s aid minister Priti Patel, hoping to attract help with financing. Gifford said the Pouncer would undergo initial testing in May and should be ready to be deployed on its first mission by the end of the year. —

 ?? Instagram ?? With 50kg of food stocked inside its compartmen­ts, each drone costing £150 ($187) would be able to deliver enough supplies to feed up to 50 people per day. —
Instagram With 50kg of food stocked inside its compartmen­ts, each drone costing £150 ($187) would be able to deliver enough supplies to feed up to 50 people per day. —

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