Zipline Medical Drones Begin Flying in the US

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Zipline Medical Drones Begin Flying in the US Zipline medical drones begin flying in the US By: Ira Boudway | May 27 2020 at 12:30 AM | Air Cargo News On the Friday before Memorial Day, a six-foot long, red-and-white drone took off from a field in Kannapolis, North Carolina, flew fifteen miles west over suburban Charlotte to Novant Health’s Huntersville Medical Center, and dropped a box of protective masks in a designated spot next to the parking lot. The flight, about 30 minutes round-trip, marked the first U.S. delivery for Zipline Inc., a California drone start-up that has been transporting medical supplies in Rwanda and Ghana since 2016. It is, Zipline says, the longest commercial drone delivery route in the country. Zipline’s U.S. debut comes almost six months ahead of schedule. The company had planned to begin service in North Carolina in October, under an agreement signed at the beginning of this year with Novant Health, which runs fifteen hospitals and nearly 700 clinics in the area. Zipline and Novant decided to accelerate their plans after the Coronavirus outbreak. “It was very much a toe in the water sort of thing,” said Angela Yochem, chief digital and technology officer at Novant, “Then this crisis hit.” Novant’s logistics center in Kannapolis happens to sit next to the campus of Stewart-Haas Racing, a NASCAR team co-owned by driver Tony Stewart and Gene Haas. The team, which has already used its trucks to deliver face masks for Novant, gave Zipline permission to build a launch hub on an empty plot next to its headquarters. It took about a week to get the distribution site up and running, said Zipline co-founder and CEO Keller Rinaudo. The hub now houses 10 drones, each capable of running dozens of trips per day up to a range of 100 miles round-trip. At full capacity, it can handle 30 drones. Novant wanted to be prepared, said Yochem, in case a surge of COVID-19 cases began straining supply lines for protective equipment. “If we relied on the traditional distribution, you’re looking at a scenario in which you’re stockpiling at the endpoint,” said Yochem, “With drone delivery, you can have an ongoing delivery of PPE or medicines or other critical supplies on demand.” The Coronavirus has caused a surge of interest and investment in automated delivery for meals, groceries, medical supplies and other essentials, with autonomous car companies, delivery apps, and drone operators all touting the benefits of contact-less systems. “COVID- 19 is messing with workforces and with logistics systems,” said Rinaudo, “When people are quarantined and staying at home, that’s a really good time to be using robots.” The Federal Aviation Administration granted Novant emergency permission to start using Zipline’s drones for COVID-19 response. The agency’s rules for small unmanned aircraft, known as Part 107, normally prohibit flying beyond the sight of an operator. The FAA approved Novant for a Part 107 waiver that is good through October, or until all COVID-19 related travel restrictions have been lifted. “This the first time the FAA has approved long-range drone delivery flights in America,” said Rinaudo. Zipline and Novant plan to continue working toward full certification for package delivery by drone, known as Part 135, as they had originally set out to do in January. At the moment, Zipline provides masks and other protective equipment to Novant’s hospital in Huntersville and to a nearby doctors’ office. Orders can be placed online and arrive within about 15 minutes, shaving off about half the normal delivery time. The battery-powered drones launch from catapults and carry parachute boxes of up to four pounds. Upon return, they’re snagged from the air by drag wires. The Kannapolis hub can serve an area up to 8,000 square miles, potentially reaching dozens of Novant clinics. Zipline’s aim is to be able to deliver COVID-19 treatments or, eventually, a vaccine. Zipline and Novant are also working with the Federal Aviation Administration for approval to deliver medicine and supplies directly to patients. Zipline’s drones, which have logged more than 1.8 million miles in Africa, fly themselves by a global navigation satellite system. Remote supervisors keep an eye on each trip. In Ghana and Rwanda, a single operator can supervise up to 30 drones simultaneously. For now, Zipline supervisors in North Carolina will oversee one drone at a time. To avoid other air traffic, the drones fly at altitudes below 500 feet at about 60 miles per hour, squawking as they go over radio transponders. “We fly very specific tubes,” said Rinaudo. “You can think of it like a subway in the sky.” .
Recommended publications
  • Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Landscape Analysis: APPLICATIONS in the DEVELOPMENT CONTEXT
    USAID GLOBAL HEALTH SUPPLY CHAIN PROGRAM Procurement and Supply Management Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Landscape Analysis: APPLICATIONS IN THE DEVELOPMENT CONTEXT An in-depth landscape analysis of the various actors, objectives, and lessons learned from existing UAV programs operating within the humanitarian supply chain Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Landscape Analysis: APPLICATIONS IN THE DEVELOPMENT CONTEXT This publication was produced for review by the United States Agency for International Development. It was prepared by Chemonics International Inc. under USAID Global Health Supply Chain Program-Procurement and Supply Management Contract NO.AID-OAA-I-15-00004/Task Order No.AID-OAA-TO-15-00007. Recommended citation: USAID Global Health Supply Chain Program-Procurement and Supply Management, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Landscape Analysis:Applications in the Development Context, February 2017, Washington, DC: Chemonics International Inc. Cover photo: Quad copter in fight. (Credit: Don Mccullough / Flickr Creative Commons) DISCLAIMER: The authors’ views expressed in this publication do not necessarily refect the views of the U.S. Agency for International Development or the U.S. government. UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES LANDSCAPE ANALYSIS 112 INTRODUCTION The USAID Global Health Supply Chain Program – Procurement and Supply Management (GHSC-PSM) project functions to ensure uninterrupted supplies of health commodities in support of U.S. government (USG)-funded public health initiatives around the world. It is a USAID program implemented by Chemonics International. GHSC-PSM is working with USAID to explore the potential of incorporating unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for moving health commodities through public health supply chains, with a goal of undertaking a pilot by the end of 2017. There are few practitioners using UAVs for cargo delivery in the development context.
    [Show full text]
  • COVID-19 Response: Vaccines, Risks, and Innovation Webinar Hosted by ICGFM, the World Bank, Gavi and the Global Fund Held June 29, 2021
    COVID-19 Response: Vaccines, Risks, and Innovation Webinar Hosted by ICGFM, The World Bank, Gavi and the Global Fund Held June 29, 2021 Program Summary The following document summarizes the information provided by the speakers through presentations, discussion, and Q&A during the webinar, COVID-19 Response: Vaccines, Risks, and Innovation. We encourage you to watch the full recorded event to get the value of the rich presentations and discussion. Hosts: ICGFM, The World Bank, Gavi, and The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Speakers: David Pearl, President, ICGFM Ed Olowo-Okere, Global Director, Governance Global Practice, The World Bank Assietou Diouf, Managing Director, Finance & Operations, Gavi Dr. Beverly Ho, Director, Health Promotion Bureau, Department of Health, Philippines Pascal Bijleveld, Director, Country Support, Gavi Alexander Birikorang, Head, Grant Financial Management, the Global Fund Naa Yawson, General Manager, Zipline Ghana Dr. Imran Pambudi, MPHM – National TB Program Manager, Ministry of Health, Indonesia Adenike Oyeyiola, Practice Manager, Governance, The World Bank This event was organized to engage public financial management (PFM) professionals about country responses to COVID-19, with a specific focus on vaccines, risks, and innovation. Speakers were asked to discuss PFM challenges and strategies in response to COVID-19 and efforts to procure and deliver vaccines. Introduction David Pearl, President of ICGFM, welcomed the participants and distinguished guests on behalf of the hosts and provided a short background on ICGFM, before inviting Ed Olowo-Okere to provide opening remarks. ICGFM is a not-for-profit membership association, established in 1978, as an umbrella organization for international public financial management professionals to improve global 1 PFM.
    [Show full text]
  • Download a PDF Version of Available Panel 2 Presentations
    Health and Humanitarian Logistics Conference UNICEF Supply Division Innovation & Influencing Markets Kristoffer Gandrup-Marino Chief, Innovation Unit © UNICEF/UN043566/Lister Innovation at UNICEF is doing something new and different that adds value. Innovation Ecosystem Need Development Scale In depth analysis of full context and Product Development & Testing Supporting initial uptake through communication of need Industry: volume guarantees and • User research • Product Development influencing markets activities • Program Inputs from field offices • Regulatory/clinical approvals • Feedback from partners • Advance Purchase Commitments • EOIs, RFPs UNICEF: • Technical Guidance • Development of Target Product • Working non-exclusively • Advocacy with Country Offices, Profiles for articulating needs to with developers implementing partners. industry • Continuous monitoring of • Addressing other market goals • Industry-Stakeholder consultations R&D landscape and through procurement tactics to align on opportunities and consultations with industry challenges • Field Trials to validate impact in UNICEF’s settings Influencing Markets How we increase perceived value: Tipping Point High • Field Trials (FT) • Programmatic and technical guidance • Engagements with partners, such as WHO • Advocacy to end-users and Market Sustainable implementing partners pull Market How we reduce cost • Foster competition • Drive voloume Low Innovators Early Majority Late Majority Early Adopters Laggards • Strategic/transparent procurement Source: E. M Rogers, Diffusion of Innovations, Time 4th edition (New York: Free Press, 1995) Governance through a stage-gate process 13 projects in the portfolio from different programmatic areas Defined Stage-Gates to support decision making Governance through Innovation Review Board (IRB) Acute Respiratory Infection Diagnostic Aid (ARIDA) Problem: Pneumonia accounts for 16% of all deaths of children under 5 years old, killing 920 136 children in 2015.
    [Show full text]
  • Drones for COVID-19 & Medical Deliveries
    Shaping the Future of Mobility India Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Drones for COVID-19 & Medical Deliveries Virtual Meeting, 24th April 2020 level of efficiency. Healthcare missions entail zero tolerance to gaps in Following the Medicine from the Sky workshop on the sidelines of Wings 01 India 2020 in March, the World Economic Forum in partnership with the service. State Government of Telangana hosted a Virtual Meting to address the following issues: 1) How can drones be used to help address the CoVID- Prem Vislawath, Founder and Chief Innovator, Marut Drones sharing 19 pandemic? 2) What potential application areas should be prioritized insights from the frontline shared experiences on supporting the local police and what is the efficacy of the technology? 3) How can we build capacity in making announcements in densely populated and hard-to-reach areas in to use drones to alter the status quo in disaster response? 4) What the region. Having commissioned nineteen drones since March 2020, a lot criteria should be used to define for success in medical deliveries to is yet to be assessed in terms of the real impact of drones on ground vis a gauge the effectiveness of drones in healthcare deliveries? vis traditional measures. Drone Use Cases in the CoVID-19 Pandemic Application areas under consideration include: Purushottam Kaushik, Head of the Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, World Economic Forum opened the proceedings by speaking about the initiatives of the World Economic Forum around Spraying of disinfectants Sterilization technology in healthcare and the need to engage interdisciplinary in public areas engineering in times of pandemic situations such as CoVID-19.
    [Show full text]
  • The Future, Delivered Reimagining Same-Day Logistics
    THE FUTURE, DELIVERED Same-day delivery capability is becoming table stakes for a successful omnichannel strategy. Today, 96% Zipline runs the only nationwide of consumers consider “fast delivery” to mean drone delivery networks in the same-day delivery, and over 50% of U.S. world, powered by the fastest homes now have access to same-day delivery services. and most reliable long distance The new logistics battleground is ultra-fast delivery by autonomous delivery drone. Across the vehicles, giving consumers down-to-the-minute control over delivery United States and around the times. Zipline equips market leaders like Walmart with the capability to world, someone gets a Zipline make cost-effective 30-minute deliveries from a single store or fulfilment delivery every 4 minutes. center to homes within a 50-mile radius. “We are teaming up with Zipline to launch a first-of-its-kind drone delivery operation in the U.S. The new service will make on-demand EXPERIENCE deliveries of select health and wellness products with the potential Tom Ward Senior Vice President to expand to general merchandise. This uniquely positions them for Customer Product, Walmart national-scale operations across the United States.” 8 Million miles of autonomous flight REIMAGINING SAME-DAY LOGISTICS 100,000+ successful commercial deliveries TYPICAL SAME-DAY GROUND DELIVERY ZIPLINE INSTANT DELIVERY SERVICE 500,000+ products delivered 50-mile radius 25 Million customers serviceable from Zipline distribution centers 2 Million customers served by same-day 2.5 Million customers served by a single 20 drone hubs ground transportation from 22 stores Zipline enabled store or warehouse completed or under contract in USA, India, Cut Delivery Times Reach more customers More precise control Centralize inventory Ghana, Rwanda and Nigeria Delight your Zipline increases your Customers choose Longer delivery customers with serviceable territory for the exact delivery time range means fewer ultra-fast delivery.
    [Show full text]
  • Zipline International Inc. 495 Pine Avenue, Half Moon Bay, CA USA
    Zipline International Inc. 495 Pine Avenue, Half Moon Bay, CA USA Marina Yang Director of Global Supply Chain Zipline International Inc. 495 Pine Avenue Half Moon Bay,, CA 94019 October 5th, 2018 The Honorable Robert E. Lighthizer United States Trade Representative Office of the United States Trade Representative 600 17th Street Northwest Washington, D.C. 20508 RE: Request for Exclusion of Zipline Parts from Tariffs Pursuant to Section 301 Dear Ambassador Lighthizer: Zipline International Inc. (“Zipline”) now submits this request for exclusion of certain specified Zipline parts Center wing (spar) from the imposition of 25-percent additional tariffs, pursuant to Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. I. INTRODUCTION Zipline International Inc. is a US company headquartered in California. Zipline designs and manufactures autonomous robotic aircraft (drones), which are used to provide healthcare delivery services around the world. Zipline has been named one of America’s most innovative companies by Fast Company magazine, and it has been covered positively by major publications such as the New York Times, CBS News, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, Time Magazine, National Geographic, and MIT Technology Review. Here is a small selection of the positive press the company has received over the last few years: New York Times - April 2016 The Atlantic - April 2016 Washington Post - October 2016 CBS Evening News - October 2016 WIRED article about Secretary Foxx's impression of Zipline - November 2016 World Bank video about Zipline - April 2017 National
    [Show full text]
  • How Saving Lives Served up $190 Million in Funding and Unicorn Status for This Bay Area Startup
    How saving lives served up $190 million in funding and unicorn status for this Bay Area startup A Zipline drone makes medical supply deliveries. ZIPLINE By Dawn Kawamoto – Staff Reporter, San Francisco Business Times May 17, 2019 Updated May 17, 2019, 2:47pm PDT Half Moon Bay-based Zipline snagged a $190 million funding round that gave the company a $1.2 billion valuation, giving unicorn status to the five-year-old startup medical drone delivery service. Zipline, which delivers medicine, blood, and various medical supplies to remote areas in east and west Africa via autonomous drones, plans to use the proceeds to increase its worldwide workforce by three-fold at the end of the year to 600 people, according to Justin Hamilton, Zipline spokesman. The funds and additional manpower will be used to expand Zipline’s service from two African countries, Rwanda and Ghana, to other countries in Southeast Asia, South Asia and regions within the United States. Currently, Zipline expects to launch its medical drone delivery service in North Carolina during the third quarter, as part of the Federal Aviation Administration’s UAS Integration Pilot Program. Zipline’s goal is to serve 700 million people in the next five years, up from the 22 million people it assists across Rwanda and Ghana. There is a growing feeling around the world that technology is not benefiting the vast majority of people, said Keller Rinaudo, Zipline CEO, in a statement. He pointed to the notion that successful technology companies are built on exploiting users’ personal information or grabbing their attention through questionable means.
    [Show full text]
  • Alliance Mobility
    Webinar: The Future of Air Alliance Mobility Thursday, December 3, 2020 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. EST Technology A World-Class Ecosystem: Proven disruptive technology assets and expertise to drive innovation as we deploy new, integrated transportation systems. Awards and Acknowledgements SkyVision Ohio’s Ground Based Detect and Avoid ODOT UTM Unmanned Traffic Management Partnerships for Safety Program (PSP) ACAS SxU Ohio’s Remote Tower Initiative • Proposal to participate in a FAA Pilot program • Rural and small airport enablement in Kent State support of General Aviation, economic University development and safer airspace. (1G3) • Development of an Ecosystem Springfield- • Research Beckley • Testing Airport • Deployment (SGH) • Support for AAM • Deployment of VTOL aircraft to accelerate the commercial market for advanced air mobility vehicles. Regional Modeling and Simulation (RMS) – Vertiport Location Assessment – NASA Ames Location analysis and Modeling and simulation of VTOL operations • Support for NASA AAM Campaign • Planning of potential Vertiport locations • Engaged local representatives in the Columbus region • Location of 7 candidate sites • Expanding to the rest of the urban centers in Ohio Further defining business use cases for VTOL technologies • Better understanding of how the transportation landscape will change Economic Impact Report for Advanced Autonomous Aircraft Technologies for the State of Ohio Photo: Getty Images Combined Airborne Sensor Network for the State of Ohio to Detect Lower Altitude Aircraft Optical Others RF Sensors RADAR Federal Entities State Agencies Interoperable Clearinghouse Framework Local Agencies Photo: Getty Images ODOT 12 Month Research Project UTM/USS/PSU Status • 36 month study for Advanced Air Mobility Technologies • Study how AAM will impact, integrate and enhance our 3D • Pending Meeting transportation infrastructure is an important goal for Min Departments of Transportation and to prepare for this future of Contributions of transportation.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ups Foundation Supports Ghana's Launch of the World's Largest Vaccine Drone Delivery Network
    Contact: June Holder UPS – North America 404-828-4805 [email protected] Gregg Svingen UPS – International +32 2776 9616 Tel. +32 476 49 0603 Mob. [email protected] THE UPS FOUNDATION SUPPORTS GHANA’S LAUNCH OF THE WORLD’S LARGEST VACCINE DRONE DELIVERY NETWORK With support from The UPS Foundation, Gavi, and other partners, Zipline drones will serve up to 2,000 health facilities and 12 million people in Ghana. ATLANTA (April 24, 2019) – The UPS Foundation, which leads the global citizenship programs for UPS (NYSE: UPS), and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, have announced support for the expansion of a medical drone network into Ghana. Zipline, a California-based automated logistics company, will use drones to make on-demand, emergency deliveries of 148 high priority products including emergency and routine vaccines, blood products and life-saving medications. The service will operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, from four distribution centers—each equipped with 30 drones—and deliver to over 2,000 health facilities serving 12 million people across the country. The partnership between the Government of Rwanda and Zipline, supported by philanthropic grants and in-kind support from The UPS Foundation and Gavi, pioneered just-in-time drone delivery of blood products to hard-to-reach clinics in Rwanda. The Government of Ghana is building on that success with expanded Zipline services, supported again by Gavi and the UPS Foundation and joined this time by the Gates Foundation and Pfizer. The Zipline drone network will be integrated into the national healthcare supply chain in Ghana and will help prevent vaccine stockouts in health facilities as well as during national immunization campaigns.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Review July 19, 2018 Page 2 GAVI and IFPW Foundation (Cont.)
    Volume 2 Issue 3 19 July 2018 GLOBALA QUARTERLY REVIEW UPDATE OF THE IFPW FOUNDATION GAVI and IFPW Foundation Participate Around the Globe… The use of blockchain technology will assist in the elimination in Transform Africa Summit of fraud in the healthcare sector, as well as better manage quality In early May, George Bray, VP Programs and Services for IFPW in the manufacturing and distribution of pharmaceutical products, Foundation, traveled to Kigali, Rwanda to represent IFPW, IFPW according to a report by data and analytics company GlobalData. The Foundation, and the IFPW-GAVI partnership at the Transform Africa technology will also play a significant role in providing support to supply Summit. GAVI Deputy CEO, Anuradha Gupta, spoke at length on IFPW GAVI Secondee Quarterly Update chain transformation in the healthcare sector, the firm said. The World (Source: Derek Short) innovation (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QQP_wS_pDY and Health Organization (WHO) estimates the cost of counterfeit drugs to among other things, the power of private sector partners, naming IFPW the healthcare industry at approximately US$30 billion. specifically during her speech at the Summit. The overall goal of the trip Walgreens has announced that it has reached 1,000 safe was to strengthen the relationship between IFPW and GAVI which was medicine disposal kiosks are now available at drugstores across the accomplished with great success. In addition, there were secondary goals United States. The program allows for the disposal of unsafe, unused, reached and some significant unintended benefits derived from the trip. or expired medications by individuals in a safe location, ensuring On day one, George visited the Zipline Drone site for a demonstration.
    [Show full text]
  • Drone Delivery Firm Zipline Raises $250 Mn for Expansion 30 June 2021
    Drone delivery firm Zipline raises $250 mn for expansion 30 June 2021 four minutes," said Zipline founder and chief executive Keller Rinaudo in the press statement. "In the past year, we have seen major growth in every market, including the US," he added. "And we're continuing to build on our proven track record and technology to bring instant logistics to more partners, communities and people." Zipline, founded in 2014, began by delivering medical supplies by drone in parts of Africa and expanded services during the pandemic to distribute personal protective equipment and Covid-19 vaccines in Ghana and in the US state of North Carolina. Staff member Georgina Wilson prepares a drone for the delivery of medical supplies at the service base run by During the pandemic, the company experienced operator Zipline in Ghana in 2019. The US firm has record growth, seeing an uptick in demand for raised new funding for expansion. contactless service as did similar robotic delivery services. The growth period saw the company expand to US-based drone operator Zipline, which has seen round-the-clock autonomous delivery service in pandemic-fueled growth of delivery of vaccines Rwanda, add four additional distribution centers and medical supplies in Africa and the United covering 90 percent of Ghana's population and States, said Wednesday it raised $250 million as it develop new partnerships with medical suppliers moves to expand globally. Kaduna and Cross River States in Nigeria, Toyota in Japan and Walmart in the US. The latest round valued the California-based startup at $2.75 billion and will be used to fund The funding round included Fidelity, Intercorp, "expansion into new industries and geographies" Emerging Capital Partners and Reinvent Capital, including "instant" e-commerce, the company said joining existing investors including Baillie Gillford, in a statement.
    [Show full text]
  • Blood Delivery by Drones: a Case Study on Zipline
    ISSN(Online): 2319-8753 ISSN (Print): 2347-6710 International Journal of Innovative Research in Science, Engineering and Technology (A High Impact Factor, Monthly, Peer Reviewed Journal) Visit: www.ijirset.com Vol. 8, Issue 8, August 2019 Blood Delivery by Drones: A Case Study on Zipline Adarsh Gangwal, Akshika Jain, Shreeja Mohanta BBA (Finance and IB), Christ (Deemed to be University), Bangalore, India ABSTRACT: Countries in Africa are one of the most densely populated countries and with the presence of substandard and inefficient infrastructures in the world. Because of the bad infrastructure, the hospitals face difficulties in obtaining medical supplies required by the patients at a particular time and in a particular quantity. Due to this, many people die even if they encounter easily curable diseases. Zipline, an American company is solving this problem by using fully automated high speed drones in an East African nation, Rwanda. This paper discusses about the origination of the company along with their process of delivery. The paper talks about supply chain of Zipline along with the innovation done by them to ensure safe and faster deliveries. Future plans along with challenges that Zipline faces is also discussed. As the company's Founder and CEO puts it “Zipline isn’t a drone company, it's a healthcare logistics company.” KEYWORDS:Drone delivery, Zipline, Supply chain management, blood delivery. I. INTRODUCTION A modern drone, also known as an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV), was first introduced in 2006 by US Customs and Border Protection Agency to protect the US and Mexico border. (1)They were originally used for military applications, but today drones are extensively used in commercial, scientific, agricultural and many other activities.
    [Show full text]