EUROPEAN aircraft manufacturer Airbus has announced a partnership with Wilhelmsen Ships Service
to begin testing parcel delivery by drone to ships at sea.
The pilot will begin in Q3 2018, as
the second stage of a larger project Airbus is conducting in Singapore to test
its Skyways
drones' potential to deliver parcels to designated dropoff spots at the
National
University of Singapore, reports Supply Chain Drive of Washington, DC.
The partnership with Wilhelmsen will
make use of the existing infrastructure and data from the university project to
put autonomous drone delivery to vessels "to the test in hectic,
real-world port conditions," according to Wilhelmsen's press release.
The Skyways project in Singapore
will be launched in July, as the technology is put to the test for both commercial
and industrial use cases.
"We believe that there is
tremendous scope for future applications for Skyways," Airbus said in a
statement. "It is aimed at experimenting and developing regulations,
technologies, and operational requirements to safely operate a drone parcel
delivery service in urban and maritime environments."
In a university setting,
Airbus will be carefully watching how effectively drones can consistently fly
set routes for dedicated last-mile delivery. If successful, such a
pilot could easily extend to other environments with a high density of
shoppers, such as cities.
The partnership with Wilhelmsen is equally consequential. It will be a test of how economic small-parcel delivery
by air could be for the vessel maintenance orders Wilhelmsen services. The
company predicts the technology could reduce its shore-to-ship delivery costs
of parts by up to 90 per cent.
Drones must also prove they can
operate despite the hectic environment a port provides, navigating skyways
despite the constant movement of containers, people, and even the ships they
will deliver to.
Airbus said the project will help it
"assess the efficiency and economic effectiveness" of air cargo
delivery at sea, and provide "tangible proof to authorities, vessel
operators and the general public" commercial drones can operate safely and
reliably.
Source : HKSG.
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