The Peterborough Examiner

UPS drones win milestone approval

FAA gives courier OK to fly over people and at night in some areas

- THOMAS BLACK AND ALAN LEVIN

DALLAS—United Parcel Service Inc. won U.S. certificat­ion to fly drones under regulation­s similar to those for airlines, a milestone that allows the company to vastly expand airborne deliveries.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion gave the courier permission to use delivery drones at hospital, university and corporate campuses with few restrictio­ns, for example, letting operators fly the aircraft at night and over people. Current regulation­s prohibit drone flights after dark, over people, beyond the remote pilot’s line of sight and at weights heavier than 25 kilograms.

“We believe now there are hundreds of campuses across the United States where we’re going to be able to offer this solution,” UPS chief transforma­tion officer Scott Price said in an interview. “We’re pretty confident we’re going to be at the forefront of trialing the various models.”

The FAA’s decision, announced Tuesday, is a big step forward in the move toward routine drone shipments. The devices promise to reduce carriers’ costs as the surge of ecommerce increases demand for home delivery, which squeezes profit margins because there are fewer packages per location than at business addresses.

So significan­t is the FAA certificat­ion that UPS chief executive officer David Abney has been planning to ring a bell in the company’s Atlanta headquarte­rs that is reserved for corporate milestones, such as big mergers.

The company said it has already made more than 1,000 revenue-generating test flights at the WakeMed hospital campus in Raleigh, N.C., recently including the first beyond the operator’s line of sight. UPS expects to roll out more drone deliveries, especially in less populated areas, in advance of more expansive drone-delivery regulation­s that are expected in 2021.

The FAA certificat­ion comes under Part 135 of FAA regulation­s, which requires extensive manuals, training routines, maintenanc­e plans and a safety program. The designatio­n for UPS also makes it easier to obtain exemptions at locations other than campuses.

UPS, which operates 564 owned and leased traditiona­l airplanes, is interested in drone deliveries of parcels as well as heavy cargo, Price said.

The company plans to announce strategic partnershi­ps with drone makers, the designers of traffic-management systems and customers such as retailers.

“We don’t limit ourselves by weight. We don’t limit ourselves by use case,” Price said.

Drone adoption has been slow going as authoritie­s wrestled with how to regulate the devices.

Early drone deliveries such as those conducted by UPS and other companies assist authoritie­s and couriers to address challenges such as creating a traffic-management system and testing technology for the unmanned aircraft to avoid objects in flight.

Drone deliveries have huge potential, Price said, though he declined to speculate how much revenue they will be able to generate.

“It wasn’t too long ago that people thought selling books online was a niche business,” he said.

 ?? UPS AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Package delivery giant UPS said it is the first company to obtain U.S. regulatory approval to operate a “drone airline.”
UPS AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Package delivery giant UPS said it is the first company to obtain U.S. regulatory approval to operate a “drone airline.”

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