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Zipline flies without ground observers: ‘Holy grail’ of drone approvals

Company mainly delivers medical cargo

A Zipline P1 drone flies over the city of Muhanga, Rwanda. (Photo: Zipline)

This story originally appeared on flyingmag.com

If a delivery drone flies and nobody is there to see it, did it really fly?

Trick question — the Federal Aviation Administration requires commercial drone operators to station humans on the ground, called visual observers (VOs), to keep an eye on every flight. So, the aircraft technically aren’t allowed to fly where no one sees them.

That is, unless you have a waiver, like the one drone delivery provider Zipline secured in September. On Friday, Zipline, which primarily delivers medical cargo such as blood, vaccines and prescriptions in the U.S. and abroad, used that approval to complete what it says was the first beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) drone flight in the U.S. without VOs.

The company had already flown BVLOS under prior FAA exemptions. But last week was the first time it — or any firm in the U.S. — had flown without VOs along the route. There is no video of the flight, since no one was there to see it.

“This is widely considered the holy grail of approvals for scaling drone delivery operations,” said Okeoma Moronu, head of global aviation regulatory affairs at Zipline.


BVLOS refers to flight beyond the view of the pilot or operator. But in the U.S., the FAA requires VOs to keep an eye on BVLOS drone flights. In other words, these flights are not truly beyond the visual line of sight, and they’re often limited to small service areas as a result.

Removing the VOs, therefore, can greatly expand the scope of a drone delivery provider’s operations beyond where it’s able to station humans on the ground.

“This exemption from the FAA represents a monumental shift for logistics and equitable access in the U.S.,” Liam O’Connor, chief operating officer of Zipline, said in a blog post. “It builds the foundation for Zipline to scale to deliver food, medicine, consumer goods and other supplies to millions of Americans on demand, and to do so in an environmentally conscious way, resulting in 97 percent fewer emissions per delivery than a gas-powered vehicle.”

Zipline flew its Platform 1 (P1) drone without VOs in Salt Lake City within an hour of receiving the all-clear from the FAA. Ground-based personnel were replaced by onboard perception technology, including the company’s patented detect and avoid (DAA) system. DAA functions like a bat’s echolocation, detecting aircraft as far as 2 miles away using acoustics.

“This system has been tested by flying tens of thousands of real-world miles around the globe and through tens of thousands of test encounters with aircraft,” said O’Connor. “It has been designed to operate with the highest level of safety regardless of visual observers along flight routes.”

The FAA in September deemed Zipline’s onboard perception system, combined with a hefty helping of operational restrictions, to be just as safe as placing VOs along the company’s routes. Those limitations require Zipline to fly below 400 feet, maintain a list of aircraft components, submit a collision and avoidance plan for all operational locations and steer its drones well clear of other aircraft.

The regulator’s approval allows Zipline to fly without VOs in Bentonville, Arkansas, and Salt Lake City, where the company is now delivering to customers without the requirement. It plans to expand the approach across its U.S. operations.

“Earlier this year, Zipline became the first company in U.S. history to receive approval from the FAA to leverage an onboard perception system to enable autonomous long-distance drone delivery flights, and [Friday], we made history doing just that,” said Moronu. “This means that Zipline can now go from serving a few thousand homes to serving hundreds of thousands of homes within the U.S.”

What it means

The removal of VOs should have a significant effect on Zipline’s operations.

Its drones are capable of flying nearly twice as far as previous approvals permitted. And without the need for VOs, the door is open for the company to operate much longer routes in the U.S., similar to those it flies in Africa. The reduced reliance on human capital also figures to decrease operating costs.

Other companies should be excited about Zipline’s new permissions, too.

In lieu of a permanent rule for BVLOS operations, the FAA awards temporary waivers on certain regulations. In September, the agency gave BVLOS permissions to four firms, including Zipline.

Another recipient, UPS Flight Forward, was permitted to replace VOs on BVLOS routes with remote operations centers, which could be tens or even hundreds of miles from its actual operations. Phoenix Air Unmanned was also authorized for BVLOS operations without VOs.

However, the permissions are not permanent. The FAA uses waivers to collect data on BVLOS flights, which it hopes will inform its proposed rule on BVLOS regulations, published in the Federal Register in May. The proposal is based on recommendations from the agency’s BVLOS Advisory Rulemaking Committee, a coalition of industry stakeholders tasked with building the framework for a final rule.

The waivers are rare — only a handful of drone operators have obtained them — and nearly all come with significant restrictions. But the FAA expects September’s round of approvals will open things up.

“Our goal is to work towards summary grants as we continue towards rulemaking,” said David Boulter, FAA associate administrator for aviation safety, at the Commercial UAV Expo in Las Vegas that month.

Summary grants are essentially streamlined authorizations for “copycat” companies with similar infrastructure, aircraft and technology to those that have already been approved.

The FAA intentionally picked applicants with four different use cases to simplify the waiver process for a wide spectrum of operators. A medical drone delivery provider, for example, could look to Zipline’s approval as a blueprint for the operational requirements needed to secure its own BVLOS permissions.

For now, though, only a handful of operators can routinely fly commercial BVLOS drone flights, and many of them are using waivers that are several years old.

Of the five companies that have been awarded FAA standard Part 135 air carrier certificates, Zipline and UPS Flight Forward now have the longest wait before their BVLOS permissions expire. Amazon Prime Air, Alphabet’s Wing, and Flytrex partner Causey Aviation Unmanned are the other three firms authorized for commercial operations under Part 135.

Those companies certainly have a leg up on the competition. But with the removal of VOs, Zipline may have the entire field beat. The company says it makes about 10,000 commercial deliveries per week, equating to about one every 70 seconds. Already, it’s completed more than 815,000 deliveries across seven countries, dwarfing all other competitors — Wing is the next closest with about 350,000 as of October.

“Zipline can now have the kind of positive impact in the U.S. that we’ve had in other countries where we can fly more than 140 miles round trip, beyond the visual line of sight of any observer, all day every day,” said O’Connor. “We have flown over 50 million commercial autonomous miles around the world, carrying everything from blood, pharmaceuticals, vaccines, educational materials, food and convenience items to tens of millions of people.”

The next step for Zipline will be the introduction of its Platform 2 (P2) system, which it says will make 10-mile deliveries in as little as 10 minutes. P2 will introduce several new pieces of tech, including a delivery droid that will replace P1’s parachute delivery system; easily installable docking and charging stations; and what is essentially a drone drive-thru window.

P2 emphasizes automation, with the only human involvement coming from the employees loading orders and remote pilots overseeing each flight. The system is expected to debut next year, though the company plans to continue P1 operations in certain markets.

It’s unclear, however, whether Zipline’s VO permissions extend beyond P1 operations. The FAA identified the company’s Sparrow drone, or P1 Zip, which it uses to conduct P1 flights, as the approved model. The new system will rely on a slightly different model, the P2 Zip.

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Jack Daleo

Jack Daleo is a staff writer for Flying Magazine covering advanced air mobility, including everything from drones to unmanned aircraft systems to space travel — and a whole lot more. He spent close to two years reporting on drone delivery for FreightWaves, covering the biggest news and developments in the space and connecting with industry executives and experts. Jack is also a basketball aficionado, a frequent traveler and a lover of all things logistics.