Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UPS approved for drone deliveries at hospitals

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DALLAS — UPS has won government approval to operate a nationwide fleet of drones, which will let the company expand deliveries on hospital campuses and move it one step closer to making deliveries to consumers.

Many regulatory obstacles remain, however, before UPS — or other operators who are testing drones — can fill the sky over cities and suburbs with drones carrying goods to people’s doorsteps.

United Parcel Service Inc. said Tuesday that its drone subsidiary was awarded an airline certificat­e last week by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

Even before getting that designatio­n, UPS Flight Forward, as the subsidiary is called, has operated more than 1,000 flights at WakeMed’s hospital campus in Raleigh, N.C.

The designatio­n removes limits on the size of the company’s potential drone operation. Flight Forward can fly an unlimited number of drones, a key step toward expanding the operation. It can also fly drones at night — the company plans to do that after installing the necessary colored warning lights on each machine.

However, UPS still faces severe restrictio­ns before it can run a large commercial operation with drones.

For example, drones won’t be allowed to fly beyond the sight of the operator without an FAA exemption for each route. Also, each flight will need a separate operator. Scott Price, the company’s chief strategy officer, said UPS will eventually apply for FAA permission to have a single operator fly multiple drones at the same time.

The airline certificat­e lets UPS fly drones carrying more than 55 pounds, “but we’re not comfortabl­e we have the hardware for that yet,” Price said in an interview.

Operations will be limited to campus-like settings because FAA has not yet written regulation­s to allow commercial drone flights over populated areas. Price said UPS is eyeing “hundreds” of campuses in the U.S., including hospitals, colleges and office complexes.

Price said the WakeMed experiment has been successful, with only “a few” drone flights canceled for mechanical problems or because of bad weather. He said none have crashed. With a special FAA exemption, the company operated a drone flight there on Friday beyond the sight of the operator, which Price said was a first for a revenuegen­erating delivery.

UPS believes the earliest commercial­ly viable uses of drones will be for same-day deliveries, for augmenting truck-borne deliveries in rural areas, and for larger drones that could carry cargo of up to a ton from one rural area to another. Price said the latter idea is still years away.

Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao called the decision a step forward in integratin­g drones into the U.S. airspace and maintainin­g U.S. leadership in unmanned aviation.

UPS is racing against technology companies and startups to develop commercial­scale deliveries by drone to consumers.

Amazon.com Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos promised in 2014 that drones would be making deliveries to people’s homes by this year, but regulatory and technologi­cal hurdles proved too much for that prediction. Earlier this year, the FAA gave permission for a unit of Google parent Alphabet Inc. to make drone deliveries, but only in a tiny piece of southweste­rn Virginia.

UPS rival FedEx plans to take part in tests by the Alphabet unit, called Wing Aviation.

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