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Wal-Mart seeks to test drones for home delivery, pickup
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[October 27, 2015]
By Nathan Layne
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Wal-Mart Stores Inc
applied Monday to U.S. regulators for permission to test drones for home
delivery, curbside pickup and checking warehouse inventories, a sign it
plans to go head-to-head with Amazon in using drones to fill and deliver
online orders.
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The world's largest retailer by revenue has for several months
been conducting indoor tests of small unmanned aircraft systems –
the term regulators use for drones - and is now seeking for the
first time to test the machines outdoors. It plans to use drones
manufactured by China's SZ DJI Technology Co Ltd.
In addition to having drones take inventory of trailers outside its
warehouses and perform other tasks aimed at making its distribution
system more efficient, Wal-Mart is asking the Federal Aviation
Administration for permission to research drone use in "deliveries
to customers at Walmart facilities, as well as to consumer homes,"
according to a copy of the application reviewed by Reuters.
The move comes as Amazon.com Inc, Google and other companies test
drones in the expectation that the FAA will soon establish rules for
their widespread commercial use. FAA Deputy Administrator Michael
Whitaker said in June that the agency expected to finalize
regulations within the next 12 months, faster than previously
planned. Commercial drone use is currently illegal, though companies
can apply for exemptions.
The FAA will review Wal-Mart's petition to determine whether it is
similar enough to earlier successful applications to be
fast-tracked, or whether it would set a precedent for exemptions,
requiring regulators to conduct a detailed risk analysis and seek
public comment, agency spokesman Les Dorr said. The FAA normally
aims to respond to such petitions in 120 days.Amazon has said it
would be ready to begin delivering packages to customers via drones
as soon as federal rules allow.
Wal-Mart spokesman Dan Toporek said the company would move quickly
to deploy drones depending on its tests and regulations.
"Drones have a lot of potential to further connect our vast network
of stores, distribution centers, fulfillment centers and
transportation fleet," he said. "There is a Walmart within five
miles of 70 percent of the U.S. population, which creates some
unique and interesting possibilities for serving customers with
drones."
Finding ways to more efficiently warehouse, transport and deliver
goods to customers has taken on new importance for Wal-Mart, which
this month projected a surprise decline in earnings next year as it
copes with costs to increase wages, beat back price competition and
boost online sales.
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In the FAA application, Wal-Mart said it wanted to test drones for
taking stock of trailers and other items in the parking lot of a
warehouse using electronic tagging and other methods. A Wal-Mart
distribution center could have hundreds of trailers waiting in its
yard, and a drone could potentially be used to quickly account for
what each one is holding.
The retailer also wants to test drones for its grocery pickup
service, which it has recently expanded to 23 markets with plans to
add another 20 markets next year. The test flights would confirm
whether a drone could deliver a package to a pick-up point in the
parking lot of a store, the application says.
Wal-Mart also said it wants to test home delivery in small
residential neighborhoods after obtaining permission from those
living in the flight path. The test would see if a drone could be
deployed from a truck "to safely deliver a package at a home and
then return safely to the same," the application says.
To date the FAA has approved more than 2,100 exemptions allowing for
commercial drone testing and use.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Chicago and David Morgan in
Washington, editing by Eric Effron and John Pickering)
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