Google
aims to begin drone package deliveries in 2017
Send a link to a friend
[November 03, 2015]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Internet giant
Alphabet Inc, the new holding company for Google, expects to begin
delivering packages to consumers via drones sometime in 2017, the
executive in charge of its drone effort said on Monday.
|
David Vos, the leader for Alphabet's Project Wing, said his company
is in talks with the Federal Aviation Administration and other
stakeholders about setting up an air traffic control system for
drones that would use cellular and Internet technology to coordinate
unmanned aerial vehicle flights at altitudes under 500 feet (152
meters).
"Our goal is to have commercial business up and running in 2017," he
told an audience at an air traffic control convention near
Washington.
Alphabet and Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O> are among a growing number of
companies that intend to make package delivery by drone a reality.
But drone deliveries are not expected to take flight until after the
FAA publishes final rules for commercial drone operations, which are
expected early next year.
Two years after initial research began, Project Wing was announced
in August 2014 with a YouTube video showing a field test of its most
viable prototype in Australia.
The prototype flown in Australia, 1.5 meters (4.9 feet) wide and 0.8
meters (2.6 feet) tall, shares the same four-propeller quad copter
design as popular consumer drones, but the company said consumers
can expect to see new vehicle types and shapes as the project
unfolds.
Inside the United States, Project Wing has conducted testing with
NASA.
Vos, who is co-chair of an FAA task force charged with coming up
with a drone registry, said a system for identifying drone operators
and keeping UAV away from other aircraft could be set up within 12
months.
[to top of second column] |
"We're pretty much on a campaign here, working with the FAA, working
with the small UAV community and the aviation community at large, to
move things along," he said.
Vos said a drone registry, which the Obama administration hopes to
set in place by Dec. 20, would be a first step toward a system that
could use wireless telecommunications and Internet technology
including cellphone applications to identify drones and keep UAV
clear of other aircraft and controlled airspace.
He said Google would like to see low altitude "Class G" airspace
carved out for drones, saying it would keep UAV away from most
manned aircraft aside from low-flying helicopters, while enabling
drones to fly over highly populated areas.
(Reporting by David Morgan and Deborah M. Todd; Editing by Alan
Crosby, Stephen R. Trousdale and Ken Wills)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|