(Bloomberg) — Alphabet Inc.’s Wing subsidiary is about to reach a milestone in the fledgling drone-delivery business: Any day now it will deliver its 100,000th package to a customer.
At its busiest delivery hub, in Logan City, Australia, the company earlier this month set a new internal record of 4,500 deliveries in one week. The system will one day be a far more efficient mode of transporting goods to people’s homes than what exists today, according to a top executive.
“We’re extremely bullish on our ability to offer this service at a lower cost than ground delivery very profitably over time,” Jonathan Bass, Wing LLC’s head of marketing and communications told Bloomberg News. “You can begin to look at this and extrapolate to what drone delivery will look like in urban and suburban environments around the world.”
Even as government regulators in the U.S. and elsewhere hash out technical requirements for this newish class of flying machines, Wing is expanding rapidly, Bass said. In addition to its Australia test sites, it has plans for growth in Virginia and Helsinki, he said.
The potentially tectonic shift to routine deliveries of sandwiches, cups of coffee and rotisserie chicken remains a long-range goal as regulators in the U.S. and elsewhere wrestle with how to craft rules.
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, which oversees the world’s busiest airspace, just finalized a set of basic technical standards for how drones should be tracked with radio beacons. In recent months, it convened a panel of industry representatives to help develop critical rules for how unpiloted devices can fly long distances safely.
Wing — along with several other companies including Amazon.com’s Prime Air and United Parcel Service Inc. — have gotten various levels of approval from the FAA to conduct tests in the U.S.
Owing in part to more restrictive rules by the FAA, Wing’s demonstration project in Christiansburg, Virginia, has been used to test various deliveries, from Girl Scout cookies to library books. Bass declined to provide statistics for deliveries in the U.S.
He did predict an expansion in the Virginia program as well as a similar effort in Finland. A separate test site in Canberra, Australia’s capital, is also growing quickly and currently makes more than 1,000 deliveries a day, Bass said.
Wing hasn’t released detailed financial information and Bass said only that the company doesn’t yet charge customers for deliveries. “We’re investing in growth today,” he said.
One of the most popular products for Wing deliveries is a simple cup of coffee. The company delivered 10,000 coffees in Logan City last year.
The company says its 100,000-delivery milestone represents real products sold to customers, and doesn’t count practice runs.
Another popular item is roasted chicken, known in Australia as a “hot chook.” The chickens are at the upper limit of what Wing’s drones — which are half-copter, half-plane hybrids — are capable of carrying. The limit is about 3 pounds (1.4 kilograms) to a location about 6 miles (10 kilometers) away, he said.
While turning Wing into an everyday service across the globe may be years away, the tests are encouraging, according to the company.
Customers can order online and Wing is increasingly automating flying operations, using computers to simulate the most efficient routes and allowing a single human to simultaneously monitor multiple drones at the same time.
“The system itself, the components of the aircraft and the aircraft are relatively inexpensive,” Bass said. “It’s very quick and easy to set up. Both the materials cost and the operations cost overtime we expect to be dramatically lower than ground delivery.”
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