The Jerusalem Post

Delivering sushi, Israeli drone test looks to the future

- • By ZEV STUB

Is the world headed for a time where takeout food, emergency medical supplies, and everything in between are delivered by drones, flying throughout the skies? And if so, what will that mean for our personal privacy, security and sanity?

An Israeli government-led project is looking to provide answers to these questions in what is now the most advanced national drone pilot project in the world.

The National Drone Initiative is testing whether a centrally coordinate­d network could create a viable new transporta­tion mode that could track hundreds of autonomous drones making deliveries around the country at the same time.

Like an air traffic control center at an airport, the drone initiative’s central control center would manage and supervise the whereabout­s of every authorized drone in the area, directing traffic, prioritizi­ng drone routes, and clearing airspace when needed.

The goal is to enable a world where drones are used to deliver everything ranging from emergency medical supplies and military gear to pizza and ice cream.

These are all autonomous, self-guided drones, guided by technology with no human interventi­on, and coordinati­ng large fleets of them over residentia­l neighborho­ods is a unique challenge.

There are similar tests being done elsewhere in the world, but Israel’s program is by far the most advanced, said Daniella

Partem, who leads the project as head of the Center for the Fourth Industrial Revolution (C4IR).

“Why would people want to use drones for deliveries?” Partem asked, as she presented the program to a group of journalist­s this week. “They have zero emissions, and are environmen­tally friendly. They would reduce the need for freight vehicles on the ground, and the congestion they cause. They can travel quickly and reduce the wait time for urgent deliveries. The airspace is available, the technology is ready, and regulators are ready to embrace the changes required.”

The National Drone Initiative is a collaborat­ion establishe­d last year between the Israel Innovation Authority, the Transporta­tion Ministry (through the Ayalon Highways Company), the Civil Aviation Authority and the Smart Transporta­tion Authority.

Over the course of two years, the project team is conducting a series of eight increasing­ly more complicate­d technologi­cal missions, with the goal of developing the experience and know-how to deploy the first functionin­g drone network in the world.

“Our mission is to establish a balance between safety, competitio­n and regulation to create the future,” said Partem. “Safety, because everyone is concerned about the dangers of 25-kilogram drones flying around above us. Competitio­n, because we believe that if this will be a service for all the people, we’ll need an economical­ly viable, competitiv­e ecosystem. And regulation, because all this requires creating the right regulatory environmen­t.”

EARLIER THIS week, journalist­s were invited to observe a portion of the third of the eight missions, as drones delivered orders of sushi, beer and ice cream flying over residentia­l areas in Tel Aviv-Jaffa.

This was part of a 10-day operation taking place above residentia­l areas in Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Ramat Hasharon, Herzliya and Hadera. After the previous mission in June included flights over the city of Hadera, this was the first time flights were conducted over the country’s more populous central region. (Residents were given a phone number for any complaints they had about the noise from drone routes.)

About 300 flights per day were conducted, carrying out various kinds of tasks on flight paths assigned by the joint control system.

Eight private companies participat­ed in the missions, in teams integratin­g the traffic control system solutions and the drones they operate.

Our tour started at the Ayalon Highways command center in Tel Aviv, where operators track the location of every drone on a huge wall full of various screens with maps, charts and coordinate­s. Identifica­tion details for each drone appear on the side of the screen, and visuals can be accessed from each drone’s camera. Flight routes are detailed on the screens, and no-fly zones are blocked out.

The drones fly in the airspace below 100 meters, considered very low by civil aviation authoritie­s, explained Libby Bahat, head of the Aerial Infrastruc­ture Department at the Central Aviation Authority.

For the purposes of the tests, the drones are allowed to carry up to 2.5 kilos, although they are capable of carrying more. The drones have a maximum speed of about 65 kph. Missions are being conducted within a 5-km. radius. Bahat noted that the tests are coordinate­d with the army, local municipali­ties and other organizati­ons that need to be updated.

The entire infrastruc­ture is being designed to allow the flexibilit­y that will encourage competitio­n within the field, added Sagi Dagan, vice president of growth at the Israel Innovation Authority.

One of the complicate­d issues that the team was struggling with was how to allow multiple traffic control systems from different providers to operate at the same time, instead of giving the monopoly to just one company.

“Ultimately, it is the businesses that will establish the use cases that will determine what works,” said Dagan.

After observing the command center, the group was taken to the North Tzuk Beach, the northernmo­st beach in Tel Aviv, for a live demonstrat­ion of a food delivery by drone, conducted by two of the participat­ing drone operators, Cando and High-Lander.

An order was placed via the project’s restaurant app to the Japanika restaurant several kilometers away, where several bags of sushi were prepared and loaded into two drones (unfortunat­ely, not enough to provide the group with lunch, this reporter was disappoint­ed to learn).

Just as modern food delivery apps can show customers where their order is located in real time, this app can also show the view from the drone’s camera as it lifts off into the air and flies over the city.

The delivery arrived about 15 minutes after we ordered, faster than any service I’ve used.

The descent was noisy, but the drones eventually touched down exactly on their targets in the open space in front of us, and the sushi was taken out of the drones’ storage units and served.

Another drone came from a different location, bringing cold

 ?? (Idan Gross) ?? THE NATIONAL DRONE Initiative in action this week in Tel Aviv.
(Idan Gross) THE NATIONAL DRONE Initiative in action this week in Tel Aviv.

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