The Denver Post

Tanzania to use drone network to deliver vital medicines

- By Rodney Muhumuza

KAMPALA, UGANDA» Drones soon will be used in Tanzania to deliver medicines to health facilities across the East African country, continuing a trend of African government­s embracing drone networks to deliver critical services.

Tanzania’s government is working with U.S. logistics company Zipline to launch what they call the world’s largest drone delivery service for emergency medical supplies.

In the first quarter of 2018, Tanzania’s government will begin using drones to make up to 2,000 deliveries per day to more than 1,000 health facilities, Zipline said in a statement Thursday.

The service will be crucial in times of unexpected demand or bad weather and for small but critical orders, said Laurean Bwanakunu, director-general of Tanzania’s national medical stores.

Since October, Zipline has been operating a similar drone delivery service in Rwanda for emergency blood deliveries to transfusio­n clinics.

With its harsh landscapes of desert and rain forest and extremes of rainy seasons and drought, Africa is burdened with what the World Bank has called “the worst infrastruc­ture endowment of any developing region today.”

Rural highways, often unpaved, disintegra­te, and in many countries, access to electricit­y has actually declined.

The speed and limited space of drones have focused aid groups and businesses on how to deliver small, sensitive and potentiall­y life-saving cargo on a continent facing some of the world’s most severe humanitari­an crises.

In Madagascar, another U.S. company, Vayu, has completed drone flights to deliver blood and stool samples from rural villages with support from the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

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