Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Changes to boost deliveries by drone

- SERENAH McKAY

New Federal Aviation Administra­tion rules will make it easier for Walmart Inc. and other retailers to expand their use of drones to deliver goods to customers.

One of the two regulation­s will allow the unmanned devices to fly over people and at night without a waiver, which will greatly increase opportunit­ies for retail deliveries.

The second rule requires remote identifica­tion technology that can broadcast vital data to authoritie­s instead of disseminat­ing it through the internet. This will allow drones to operate in areas without internet access.

The FAA said in a news release Monday that it has submitted both rules to the Federal Register, which is expected to publish them in January. They will take effect 60 days after publicatio­n.

FAA Administra­tor Steve Dickson said the new rules address safety and privacy concerns regarding the use of drones. “They get us closer to the day when we will more routinely see drone operations such as

the delivery of packages,” he said.

U.S. Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao, who oversees the FAA, added that the rules will speed innovation­s in drone technology.

Drones are the fastestgro­wing sector in transporta­tion, with more than 1.7 million drone registrati­ons and 203,000 FAA-certified remote pilots, the federal agency said in the release.

Walmart began testing drone delivery of groceries and household goods in Fayettevil­le, N.C., in September. The same month, the Bentonvill­e retailer said that it will start drone delivery of health and wellness products from a Walmart store near its headquarte­rs in early 2021.

Then later in September, the company started a pilot project in North Las Vegas, Nev., that uses drones to deliver covid-19 self-collection test kits to customers’ homes. Walmart added the community of Cheektowag­a, N.Y., to the program in October.

The company said that if the trials are successful, it will look to expand the use of drones to other areas.

Walmart worked with Israeli drone delivery firm Flytrex for the North Carolina test. Flytrex drones can carry up to 6.6 pounds for 3.5 miles, cruising at 32 mph at an altitude of 230 feet.

Items are packed into the drone’s delivery box, and customers use an app to approve delivery when the device reaches the backyard. A wire release mechanism then gently lowers the box from a height of 80 feet.

Other retailers are exploring the use of drones. Walmart’s ecommerce rival Amazon.com got approval from the FAA in August to test its drone delivery service Amazon Prime Air. Amazon hasn’t said yet where or when it will start testing.

Pharmacy chain Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. made the first U.S. drone delivery in October 2019. Walgreens uses Wing Aviation Co., owned by Google parent company Alphabet Inc., to deliver over-thecounter medication­s and snack foods in Christians­burg, Va.

And a subsidiary of UPS Inc. called UPS Flight Forward made its first delivery using a drone for CVS Health Corp. in November 2019.

The Small UAV Coalition, an industry trade group, had a mixed reaction to the new FAA rules. UAV stands for unmanned aerial vehicles.

The group said in a statement that it welcomes the rule authorizin­g drone operations at night without a waiver. And while it supports the creation of a new category for certified drone users that gives them broader authority to operate over people, the coalition called the rule’s risk methodolog­y “unduly restrictiv­e.”

But the group’s biggest concern with the regulation­s is the requiremen­t to use only broadcast technology for remote identifica­tion. “The FAA missed the opportunit­y to adopt a flexible, technology neutral approach to remote ID by allowing both broadcast and network technology,” the coalition said.

Coalition members include Amazon Prime Air and Alphabet’s Wing Aviation. The group’s website states that drones “will transform our economy in a multitude of ways,” including fast and environmen­tally friendly consumer delivery.

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